## Correct Answer: C. Acetaminophen In chronic kidney disease (CKD), the primary concern with analgesics is nephrotoxicity and accumulation due to reduced renal clearance. Acetaminophen is the safest choice for postoperative analgesia in CKD patients because it undergoes hepatic metabolism (conjugation with glucuronic acid and sulfate) and does not depend on renal excretion for elimination. Unlike NSAIDs, acetaminophen does not inhibit prostaglandin synthesis in the kidney, thus preserving renal blood flow and glomerular filtration. The standard dose (500–1000 mg every 4–6 hours, max 3–4 g/day) is safe even in advanced CKD, though some guidelines recommend caution at the upper limit in severe renal failure. Post-nephrectomy, the remaining kidney is already compromised; NSAIDs would further reduce renal perfusion via inhibition of vasodilatory prostaglandins (PGE₂, PGI₂), precipitating acute kidney injury or accelerating CKD progression. Acetaminophen provides adequate analgesia without these risks and is the standard recommendation in Indian clinical practice (as per KDIGO guidelines and Indian nephrology consensus) for pain management in CKD patients. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Naproxen** — Naproxen is a long-acting NSAID that is contraindicated in CKD because it inhibits renal prostaglandins, reduces glomerular filtration rate, and increases the risk of acute kidney injury and hyperkalemia. NSAIDs are nephrotoxic and can cause acute tubular necrosis, especially in patients with already compromised renal function. Post-nephrectomy, the single remaining kidney cannot tolerate NSAID-induced vasoconstriction. **B. Diclofenac** — Diclofenac is a potent NSAID with significant renal toxicity. It is explicitly contraindicated in CKD (especially stages 3–5) because it causes acute interstitial nephritis, reduces renal blood flow, and is associated with rapid decline in GFR. In post-nephrectomy patients, diclofenac poses an unacceptable risk of acute decompensation of the remaining kidney function. **D. Indomethacin** — Indomethacin is a potent NSAID that is contraindicated in CKD due to its strong inhibition of renal prostaglandins, leading to acute kidney injury, fluid retention, and hyperkalemia. It has a long half-life and accumulates in renal failure. In a post-nephrectomy patient with CKD, indomethacin would significantly accelerate renal deterioration and is absolutely avoided. ## High-Yield Facts - **Acetaminophen** is the analgesic of choice in CKD because it undergoes hepatic metabolism and does not depend on renal excretion. - **NSAIDs** (naproxen, diclofenac, indomethacin) are contraindicated in CKD because they inhibit renal prostaglandins (PGE₂, PGI₂), reduce GFR, and cause acute kidney injury. - **Post-nephrectomy patients** have a single kidney at risk; NSAIDs can precipitate acute decompensation and accelerate CKD progression. - **Acetaminophen dosing** in CKD: standard 500–1000 mg every 4–6 hours, max 3–4 g/day; no dose adjustment needed in mild-to-moderate CKD, caution in severe renal failure. - **NSAID-induced nephrotoxicity** mechanism: inhibition of vasodilatory prostaglandins → afferent arteriole vasoconstriction → reduced glomerular filtration → acute tubular necrosis or interstitial nephritis. ## Mnemonics **SAFE in CKD (Analgesics)** **S**alicylates (low-dose aspirin for cardioprotection only, not analgesia) | **A**cetaminophen | **F**entanyl patches (opioids, if needed) | **E**xtra caution with NSAIDs. Use this to remember acetaminophen is the safest non-opioid choice in renal disease. **NSAIDs = Nephrotoxic in CKD** **N**ephrotoxic | **S**ynthesis inhibitors (of renal PGs) | **A**cute kidney injury | **I**nterstitial nephritis | **D**eclining GFR | **S**tay away in CKD. Quick recall that all NSAIDs are contraindicated. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs NSAIDs with "common postoperative analgesics" to trap students who default to NSAIDs without considering renal contraindications. The trap is especially potent because NSAIDs are indeed widely used in general surgery, but CKD status overrides this default choice. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian tertiary care, post-nephrectomy CKD patients are routinely counseled to avoid all NSAIDs (even over-the-counter diclofenac, which is ubiquitous in Indian pharmacies) and to use acetaminophen or opioids for pain. A single missed NSAID dose can trigger acute decompensation in a patient with one kidney. _Reference: KD Tripathi Pharmacology Ch. 9 (NSAIDs & Analgesics); Harrison Ch. 279 (Chronic Kidney Disease); Robbins Ch. 20 (Kidney pathology)_
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