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MD Pharmacology NMC syllabus ~5 min read Recent advances last updated on 2026-06-19

RAAS Inhibitors

Drugs Modifying the Renin-Angiotensin System — ACE Inhibitors, ARBs, Renin Inhibitors & ARNI

Past RGUHS + DNB + MPMSU + MUHS · 34 MPMSUJan '25 MPMSUOct '25 DNBDec '25 MUHSWinter '25 RGUHSDec '23 RGUHSJul '23 DNBApr '23 RGUHSMay '22 RGUHSNov '21 DNBDec '21 MUHSWinter '21 RGUHSNov '20 RGUHSJun '20 DNBJun '20 RGUHSNov '19 RGUHSMay '19 RGUHSNov '18 MPMSUJun '17 MPMSU2017 MUHSSummer '17 MPMSU2016 DNBDec '16 DNBDec '16 MUHSSummer '16 MUHSSummer '15 DNBDec '13 MPMSU2012 DNBDec '12 RGUHSMay '11 DNBDec '11 RGUHSMay '10 MPMSU2007 MPMSU2003 MPMSU1999

Introduction

  • The renin-angiotensin system (RAS/RAAS) is the dominant long-term regulator of blood pressure, Na+/K+ balance, extracellular fluid volume and cardiovascular remodeling; its dysregulation drives hypertension, heart failure, post-MI remodeling, diabetic nephropathy and CKD.
  • Angiotensin II (AngII), an octapeptide, is the principal effector — on a molar basis ≈40× more potent a pressor than noradrenaline. RAS-blocking drugs are therefore among the most-used cardiovascular agents.
  • Four points of pharmacological interruption — Renin (direct renin inhibitors), the AngI→AngII step (ACE inhibitors), the AT1 receptor (ARBs), and a combined AT1-block + natriuretic-peptide-sparing strategy (ARNI); aldosterone-receptor antagonists and β1-blockers also suppress the RAS but are covered elsewhere.
  • All RAS inhibitors share a common footprint — antihypertensive, cardioprotective (heart failure, post-MI) and renoprotective (proteinuric/diabetic nephropathy) — but differ in how they perturb individual RAS components (see comparison figure).
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Raas Inhibitors

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