Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C1332347 (
ADH
)
2,230
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Six new cases of psychogenic water intoxication are discussed in the light of 150 observations published in the literature since 1935. 87% of all patients were schizophrenic, and 13% had other psychoses and a variety of functional and organic psychopathies. Psychogenic polydipsia is a prerequisite of psychogenic water intoxication. Water intake either overrides an intact osmoregulation (46% of all cases) or, allied to an inadequate urinary dilutional capacity (54%), leads to a transitory, sometimes repeated, and (in 8% of all cases) lethal water intoxication and hypoosmolality. - The consequence of hypoosmolality is metabolic encephalopathy, with agitation, convulsions and coma as its most common symptoms. Profuse diuresis, enuresis and urinary retention, gastric dilatation, watery vomiting and watery diarrhea are diagnostically helpful symptoms of polydipsia typically denied by the patients. Hypoosmolality/hyponatremia are the hallmarks of water intoxication. However, fewer than 50% of all patients present with the expected maximal urinary dilution. Inadequate
ADH
activity and increased sensitivity of the renal tubule to antidiuretic hormone are the pathogenetic factors in this inappropriate urinary dilution, while
psychosis
, psychotropic drugs, diuretics, nicotine and alcohol withdrawal are possible causes and cofactors of polydipsia and inadequate urinary dilution. New aspects of treatment are discussed.
...
PMID:[Psychogenic water intoxication]. 264 58
Many psychiatric patients have polydipsia and polyuria without identifiable underlying medical causes. Hyponatremia develops in some polydipsic patients and can progress to water intoxication with such symptoms as confusion, lethargy,
psychosis
, and seizures or death. This syndrome is sometimes called "compulsive water drinking," "psychogenic polydipsia," and "self-induced water intoxication." Although the underlying pathophysiology of the syndrome is unclear, several factors have been implicated in producing polydipsia and symptomatic hyponatremia. These include a possible hypothalamic defect, the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of
ADH
(SIADH), and neuroleptic medication. Evaluation of psychiatric patients with polydipsia includes a search for other medical causes of polydipsia, polyuria, hyponatremia, and SIADH. Treatment modalities currently available include fluid restriction and medications.
...
PMID:Polydipsia and hyponatremia in psychiatric patients. 328 1
Endocrine crises can occur in diabetes mellitus, in pituitary failure when there is a lack of ACTH, TSH or
ADH
secretion, in severe hyper- or hypothyroidism (thyroid storm and myxedema coma), severe hyper- or hypoparathyroidism (parathyroid crisis and tetany), in adrenal failure and in patients with pheochromocytoma or carcinoid tumors. Cushing's syndrome can be associated with
psychotic
crises. This review describes the most important clinical features and the basic diagnostic and therapeutic aspects of the non diabetic endocrine crises.
...
PMID:[Endocrine crises]. 848 76
Polydipsia can be defined as an impulsive behavior leading to absorption of large amounts of water (4 to 20 litres a day), without any underlying organic disease. Its prevalence in a population of chronic psychiatric patients can be as high as 6 to 17%. Schizophrenia represents 80% of cases reported. Some patients with polydipsia may develop hyponatremia, leading to a PIP syndrome (Polydipsia intermittent hyponatremia and
psychosis
). Hyponatremia or water intoxication appears when three conditions are present: an abnormal regulation of thirst, an inappropriate ADH secretion and/or an excessive renal sensitivity to
ADH
, with an increased sensitivity of the central nervous system to hyponatremia. The clinician must first identify patients at risk to develop water intoxication and start treatment before any severe physical complication occurs. Pharmacological treatments aiming at an increase of renal free-water excretion--do not show a constant efficacy in the correction of hyponatremia, they have no action on polydipsia. The new atypical neuroleptics such as clozapine and risperidone seem to open new perspectives in the treatment of polydipsia. Controlled studies should be performed in this field.
...
PMID:["Polydipsia, intermittent hyponatremia and psychoses" syndrome: a diagnosis and therapeutic management of a case]. 892 56
The largest cluster of positive results, considering both bipolar and schizophrenia, occurs in the 4p region that includes D4S394 and DRD5. Four groups report at least weakly positive linkage analyses this region for bipolar disorder, and two groups find weak positive allelic association with schizophrenia in the region, although at separate markers. On the other hand, at least five groups do not find evidence for linkage of bipolar disorder to this area of 4p. The pattern on 4q is less clear, with a mixture of negative and small positive results in either bipolar or schizophrenia families. Additional allelic association and TDT studies of 4p markers in bipolar disorder and in schizophrenia might be able to narrow the focus of the 4p investigations. The dopamine D5 receptor gene has seductive qualities as a candidate gene because of the pharmacology of
psychotic
disorders. It would be helpful to have additional markers developed close to or in the recoding region of DRD5 in order to have the extra information at the DNA level provided by haplotype analysis. Chromosome 4 susceptibility loci may figure prominently in alcoholism, although a great deal of work remains to be done. With just two groups reporting here, only a limited assessment of the overall effect of the
ADH
cluster and the GABA cluster is possible. However, these loci have merit as candidate genes, and thus further work on the current and additional families is clearly indicated.
...
PMID:Chromosome 4 workshop. 968 26
Water intoxication is a life-threatening disorder accompanied by brain function impairment due to severe dilutional hyponatremia. We treated a 22-year-old man without
psychotic
illness who had been put in a detention facility. He drank 6 liters of water over a 3-hour period at the facility as a game's penalty, and he showed progressive psychiatric and neurological signs including restlessness, peculiar behavior and convulsions. On his admission, 15 h after the discontinuation of the water drinking, he was in a coma, showing intermittent convulsions and remarkable hyponatremia (120 mmol/l). Because his laboratory tests showed hypertonic urine and normal sodium excretion, the diagnosis of secondary development of syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH) was strongly suggested and later confirmed by the suppression of the renin-aldosterone system and the inappropriately elevated secretion of
ADH
. Saline infusion and an initial administration of furosemide in addition to dexamethasone as treatments for the patient's brain edema successfully improved his laboratory data and clinical signs by the 3rd hospital day, and he was returned to the facility without physical or psychiatric abnormalities on the 6th day. The secondary SIADH might have been due to the prolonged emesis, recurrent convulsions and rapid elevation of intracranial pressure.
...
PMID:A case of water intoxication with prolonged hyponatremia caused by excessive water drinking and secondary SIADH. 2457 Jun 85