Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (nausea)
23,468 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The response of plasma arginine vasopressin (AVP) to nicotine administered by chewing gum (Nicorette, 2 mg) was examined in nine healthy volunteers. Heart rate, mean arterial pressure, serum osmolality, plasma AVP level, and plasma nicotine level were measured at baseline (control) and at 30, 45, and 60 minutes after initial administration of the gum. There were small increases in heart rate (72 +/- 6.3 to 82 +/- 5.1 beats/min, p less than 0.05) and mean arterial pressure (88 +/- 8.2 to 93 +/- 10 mm Hg, p = NS), while the plasma nicotine level increased to a maximum of 16 +/- 2.0 ng/ml (p less than 0.001). No changes were seen in either osmolality (283 +/- 3.4 mOsm/kg) or AVP level (4.3 +/- 2.0 pg/ml) in eight of the nine subjects who remained asymptomatic. In one subject whose hemodynamic and plasma nicotine responses were similar to the others but who became nauseated, the plasma AVP level increased from 4.2 to 26 pg/ml. These data suggest that nicotine at the plasma concentrations achieved in this study is not associated with stimulation of plasma AVP secretion in normal man. Other factors in association with nicotine use, in this case nausea, may be required for AVP stimulation to occur.
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PMID:Response of plasma arginine vasopressin to nicotine in normal man. 316 97

Water drinking suppresses arginine vasopressin (AVP) release before changes in tonicity or volume. To further characterize this oropharyngeal neuroendocrine reflex, we took advantage of ongoing studies of osmoregulation in pregnancy as follows: five women studied serially in early (8 +/- 1 wk, mean +/- SD) and late (32 +/- 3 wk) pregnancy and 8-10 wk postpartum were slowly infused with hypertonic saline for 150 min while drinking water to satiety (drinking started at 120 min). Plasma osmolality (Posmol) at 120 min was increased (277 +/- 3 to 291 +/- 2, 280 +/- 6 to 295 +/- 5, and 287 +/- 1 to 307 +/- 1 mosmol/kg in 1st and 3rd trimesters and postpartum; P less than 0.01), accompanied by increments in plasma AVP (PAVP) up to 7 +/- 5, 5 +/- 3, and 8 +/- 3 pg/ml, respectively (P less than 0.01). PAVP declined as soon as drinking began (P less than 0.01 at 5 min), despite maintenance of peak osmolality for another 30 min. Similar events were recorded in three males. Calculation of normal disappearance rates (t1/2) demonstrated that AVP levels decreased more rapidly (P less than 0.01) in the 3rd trimester compared with early pregnancy and postpartum. Two other subjects became nauseated during their 1st trimester and postpartum tests which permitted comparison of nausea and drinking which evoke central reflexes with opposing action on AVP release. PAVP, which had increased markedly (range 17-42 pg/ml; P less than 0.01), was not abolished by drinking. These data demonstrate the potency of the drinking reflex on osmoregulation in pregnant and nonpregnant subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Suppression of AVP release by drinking despite hypertonicity during and after gestation. 335 88

In order to examine the influence of carotid baroreceptor stimulation on arginine vasopressin secretion, 8 normal healthy males were subjected to static neck suction of -3.3 kPa for 20 min in the upright sitting position after overnight food and fluid restriction. The plasma concentration of arginine vasopressin did not change significantly during neck suction. However, in 3 subjects the termination of neck suction induced large increases in plasma arginine vasopressin from 1.8 to 63.7 ng/l, from 0.7 to 34.3 ng/l and from 2.1 to 19.0 ng/l, respectively. Two subjects experienced symptoms such as nausea and paleness during neck suction. Systolic arterial pressure increased slightly but significantly during neck suction from 15.3 +/- 0.3 to 15.7 +/- 0.4 kPa (N = 7, P less than 0.05), whereas mean arterial pressure, diastolic arterial pressure, central venous pressure, heart rate, plasma osmolality, plasma sodium and potassium were unchanged. Haemoglobin concentration in blood and haematocrit increased significantly during and after neck suction, whereas plasma volume decreased. We conclude that neck suction with a negative pressure of 3.3 kPa in upright sitting man does not significantly affect plasma arginine vasopressin. However, termination of the stimulation induces large increases in some subjects. This may be explained by a direct effect on the vagus nerve or by a selective deloading of carotid baroreceptors.
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PMID:Plasma arginine vasopressin during neck suction in upright sitting man. 382 42

Nausea was induced by having subjects smoke two high nicotine cigarettes in quick succession. Plasma levels of prolactin, adrenocorticotropic hormone, beta-endorphin/beta-lipotropin, growth hormone, arginine vasopressin, and neurophysin I increased without changes in thyroid stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone, or follicle stimulating hormone. Nausea and pituitary hormone release correlated with high nicotine intake (smoking 2.87 mg nicotine cigarettes) but did not occur during lower nicotine intake (smoking 0.48 mg nicotine cigarettes). Individual differences in nausea and related hormonal responses may provide an objective method for predicting receptivity to smoking.
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PMID:Pituitary hormone response to cigarette smoking. 394 62

The osmolality of body fluids is normally maintained within a narrow range. This constancy is achieved largely via hypothalamic osmo-receptors that regulate thirst and arginine vasopressin, the antidiuretic hormone (ADH). Anything that interferes with the full expression of either osmoregulatory function exposes the patient to the hazards of abnormal increases or decreases in plasma osmolality. Hyposmolality is almost always due to a defect in water excretion. Increased intake may contribute to the problem but is rarely, if ever, a sufficient cause. Impaired water excretion can be due to a primary defect in the osmoregulation of ADH (inappropriate antidiuresis) or secondary to nonosmotic stimuli like hypovolemia or nausea. The two types differ in clinical presentation and treatment. Resetting of the ADH osmostat is commonly associated with resetting of the thirst osmostat. Hyperosmolarity is almost always due to deficient water intake. Excessive excretion may contribute to the problem but is never a sufficient cause. Impaired water intake can result from a defect in either the osmoregulation of thirst of the necessary motor responses. Thirst may be deficient because of primary osmoreceptor damage as in the syndrome of adipsic hypernatremia or secondary to nonosmotic influences on the set of the system. They are distinguishable by the clinical presentation as well as the type of ADH defects with which they are associated. So-called essential hypernatremia due to primary resetting of the osmostat has been postulated, but unambiguous evidence for such an entity has not yet been reported.
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PMID:Neurogenic disorders of osmoregulation. 703 30

1. The anti-emetic drug metoclopramide has been shown to stimulate secretion of the antidiuretic hormone arginine vasopressin. Since metoclopramide is used to treat nausea, which is another potent stimulus to vasopressin secretion, the aim of this study was to determine whether metoclopramide might limit free water excretion and so cause hyponatraemia. 2. Metoclopramide 20 mg (0.2-0.3 mg/kg), prochlorperazine 12.5 mg (0.1-0.2 mg/kg) and placebo were administered intravenously in a double blind randomized crossover way at 2 week intervals and the effects on urine flow rate, plasma osmolality, thirst ratings and plasma sodium and atrial natriuretic peptide concentrations determined in water-loaded (10 mL/kg) healthy young men. 3. There were no differential effects on any variable of either drug versus placebo. 4. These results indicate that metoclopramide is unlikely to cause any significant water retention in a clinical setting or precipitate hyponatraemia.
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PMID:Effects of anti-emetics on water excretion in humans. 815 53

There is evidence to suggest that the arginine vasopressin release observed in association with emesis after i.v. injection of cholecystokinin (CCK) and N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) is mediated by stimulation of emetic centers in the brainstem. That the GnRH-releasing action of NMDA is also sometimes accompanied by emesis led to the suggestion that stimulation of this parvocellular system by the glutamate agonist may also be mediated in part via activation of brainstem pathways. If this is the case, then other nauseogenic agents, such as CCK, should similarly elicit GnRH release. The foregoing prediction was tested in the castrated juvenile male monkey, an experimental model characterized by the absence of spontaneous GnRH release. GnRH discharges were monitored indirectly by measuring changes in circulating LH concentrations after the responsivity of the gonadotroph had been heightened by a chronic intermittent i.v. infusion of the decapeptide. An i.v. bolus of CCK at 10 and 30 micrograms/kg BW led to a distinct discharge of GnRH accompanied by emesis or other behaviors suggestive of nausea. Lower doses of CCK (1 and 3 micrograms/kg BW) failed to significantly perturb GnRH release or cause emesis, although NMDA (5 mg/kg BW; racemic form) injected i.v. 3 h after the CCK challenge led to a robust rise in GnRH. In a parallel study, three repetitive i.v. CCK injections at 2h intervals maintained intermittent GnRH release. Pretreatment with a long-acting GnRH receptor antagonist ([AcD2Nal1,4ClPhe2,DTrp3,DArg6,DAla10]GnRH -HOAc) abolished the LH response to CCK, confirming that the action of this peptide was mediated by GnRH release. Although a direct hypothalamic site of action for these agents remains the most likely possibility, since both NMDA and CCK receptors are present in the infundibular region, the present data are consistent with the notion that CCK and, by inference, NMDA may activate GnRH release in part via the stimulation of brainstem emetic centers. Plasma GH, PRL, and cortisol concentrations were also monitored during the course of some of these experiments, and the release of these hormones was observed after the administration of either the 10 or 30 micrograms/kg BW dose of CCK.
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PMID:Cholecystokinin stimulates gonadotropin-releasing hormone release in the monkey (Macaca mulatta). 846 72

The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of a serotonin subtype 3 receptor antagonist, ondansetron, on arginine vasopressin secretion in humans. Plasma vasopressin concentrations were determined in 24 breast cancer patients undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy, before and after ondansetron intravenous (i.v.) administration. Ondansetron (8 mg i.v. at time 0 and 8 mg po at time 240 min) was administered alone in 12 patients and afterwards in combination with chemotherapy in all patients. No changes in hormone levels were found after ondansetron alone and in 17 patients who did not claim nausea and/or emesis after chemotherapy. In seven patients who experienced nausea and /or emesis, vasopressin levels significantly (P < 0.01) increased (from 6.3 +/- 0.9 ng/L in basal conditions to 15.1 +/- 3.3 ng/L at 10 h; P < 0.05 vs baseline). The results suggest the possibility that in humans, serotoninergic mechanisms, which modulate vasopressin secretion, may involve the activation of the serotonin receptors recognised by ondansetron.
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PMID:Effect of the 5-HT3 receptor antagonist ondansetron on plasma AVP secretion: a study in cancer patients. 909 Oct 68

We describe a 51-year-old woman with long-standing young-onset primary hypothyroidism. Serum cortisol, adrenocorticotropin, and arginine vasopressin levels were normal, but urinary excretion of 17-hydroxycorticosteroid was decreased. Administration of a very small initial dose of thyroid hormone induced severe acute complications including fever, palpitation, and sweating associated with a rapid decrease in serum thyrotropin level, a dramatic increase in serum alkaline-phosphatase level, and a decrease in serum total cholesterol level. A week later, the late complications of nausea, severe hyponatremia, and eosinophilia occurred. Serum cortisol level decreased slightly but remained within normal limits during this hyponatremic period. This rare case suggests that increased sensitivity to thyroid hormone can occur in long-standing primary hypothyroidism with biphasic clinical course of acute thyrotoxic complications followed by severe hyponatremia resembling hypoadrenocorticism.
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PMID:Increased sensitivity to thyroid hormone replacement therapy followed by hyponatremia and eosinophilia in a patient with long-standing young-onset primary hypothyroidism. 1043 59

We report a case of a seventy-year-old woman with syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH) and adrenal insufficiency induced by Rathke's cleft cyst. She experienced nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and headache and disturbance of consciousness induced by hyponatremia at a serum sodium level of 100 mEq/l. In spite of severe hyponatremia, urinary sodium excretion was not suppressed and serum osmolality (270 mOsm/kg) was lower than urine osmolality (304 mOsm/kg), and arginine vasopressin (AVP) remained within normal range. SIADH was diagnosed because she was free from other diseases known to cause hyponatremia such as dehydration, cardiac dysfunction, liver dysfunction, renal dysfunction, hypothyroidism, and adrenal insufficiency. Cranial computed tomographic (CT) scan and cranial magnetic resonance (MR) imaging showed a cystic lesion of approximately 2 cm in diameter in the pituitary gland. These images suggested that the cystic lesion was a Rathke's cleft cyst, which was the cause of SIADH. Water restriction therapy normalized her serum sodium concentration and improved her symptoms. After one year, she suffered from general fatigue, appetite loss, fever, and body weight loss (5 kg/2 months). She had neither hypotension nor hypoglycemia, but her serum sodium level was low and serum cortisol, ACTH, and urine free cortisol were very low. Therefore, secondary adrenal insufficiency was suspected and diagnosed by stimulation tests. After start of hydrocortisone replacement therapy (10 mg/day), her symptoms disappeared. In conclusion, Rathke's cleft cyst should be kept in mind as a potential cause in a patient with SIADH, hypopituitarism, and/or adrenal insufficiency.
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PMID:Syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH) and adrenal insufficiency induced by rathke's cleft cyst: a case report. 1107 19


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