Learning Objectives
Differentiate between Acute and Chronic gout management. Master the Xanthine Oxidase pathway, the mechanism of Colchicine in inhibiting neutrophil chemotaxis, and the critical drug-drug interactions involving Allopurinol with Azathioprine/6-MP.
1. Chronic Gout Management (Preventive)
Chronic therapy aims to lower serum uric acid levels. These drugs should not be started during an acute flare, as rapid shifts in uric acid can worsen the attack.

| Drug | Mechanism | High-Yield Clinical Pearls |
|---|---|---|
| Allopurinol | Competitive Xanthine Oxidase inhibitor. | Prevents Tumor Lysis Syndrome; increases levels of 6-MP and Azathioprine. |
| Febuxostat | Inhibits Xanthine Oxidase. | Think: “Febu-XO-stat” makes Xanthine Oxidase static. |
| Probenecid | Inhibits reabsorption of uric acid in the PCT. | Can cause uric acid stones; inhibits Penicillin secretion. |
| Pegloticase | Recombinant Uricase. | Converts uric acid to Allantoin (highly water-soluble). |
2. Acute Gout Management (Anti-inflammatory)
The goal during a flare is to stop the inflammatory response triggered by monosodium urate crystals. NSAIDs are typically first-line, followed by glucocorticoids or colchicine.
| Drug | Mechanism | Adverse Effects |
|---|---|---|
| NSAIDs | Reversible COX inhibition. | Avoid low-dose salicylates (decreases UA excretion). |
| Glucocorticoids | PLA2 inhibition; anti-inflammatory. | Hyperglycemia; used if NSAIDs are contraindicated. |
| Colchicine | Binds tubulin; inhibits microtubule polymerization. | Diarrhea (severe GI upset), neuromyopathy, myelosuppression. |
3. The Salicylate Paradox
The effect of salicylates (Aspirin) on uric acid excretion is strictly dependent on the dose, which can be a confusing point for students.
| Aspirin Dose | Effect on Uric Acid | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| Low Dose | Decreases Excretion (↑ Serum UA) | Inhibits tubular secretion of uric acid. |
| High Dose | Increases Excretion (↓ Serum UA) | Inhibits tubular reabsorption (like Probenecid). |
Activity:
High-Yield Mnemonics & Tips:
- Colchicine: Think “Cho-lchicine” for “Che-motaxis” inhibition. It stops the neutrophils from reaching the joint.
- Drug Interaction: Because 6-MP and Azathioprine are metabolized by Xanthine Oxidase, adding Allopurinol will cause their levels to skyrocket, leading to severe bone marrow suppression.
- Probenecid: “P”robenecid “P”revents “P”eeing out Penicillin, but promotes “P”eeing out Uric Acid.
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