Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (vasopressin)
23,126 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A patient with a syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion secondary to an undifferentiated bronchogenic carcinoma with distant metastases was treated with demethylchlortetracycline. Up until recently, treatment of this syndrome was based on water restriction and when the plasma sodium concentration became extremely low, hypertonic saline solution administration. Recently it has been demonstrated that the antibiotic demethylchlortetracycline inhibits the action of the antidiuretic hormone on the renal tubules. The drug has been used successfully in five patients with the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion. The administration of 900 mg of demethylchlortetracycline per day for 7 days in our patient produced an increase of free water clearance, diuresis, plasma sodium concentration, and plasma osmolarity. Urinary excretion of sodium and urinary osmolarity declined. Furthermore, the neurological symptoms attributed to hyponatremia improved markedly. The patient lost 6 kg during treatment, probably because of negative water balance induced by demethylchlortetracycline. Even though the administration of demethylchlortetracycline did not produce significant decreases in the glomerular filtration rate or renal blood flow in our patient, it is advisable to control the renal function in individuals treated with this drug since it may on occasion determine renal insufficiency.
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PMID:[Treatment of the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion with demethylchlortetracycline (author's transl)]. 11 37

A radioimmunoassay has been developed for plasma arginine-vasopressin in man and dog. The mean recovery of added arginine-vasopressin (AVP) was 60 +/-6.9 (S.D.)% and the lower threshold of detection 2.0 pmol/1. A close correlation was found between concurrent radioimmunoassay and bioassay values. The mean concentration found in peripheral venous blood in healthy men after overnight fasting was 5.3 pmol/1 (range 4.6-6.2 pmol/1.) In man, significant increases in plasma AVP occurred after dehydration (5-9-9-5 pmol/1) and significant decreases after oral water-loading (5.9-9.5 pmol/1). During i.v. infusion of graded doses of synthetic AVP in normal men, plasma levels were closely correlated with infusion rate. On stopping the infusion, plasma vasopressin fell exponentially with a half-life of between 7 and 8 min. In man, plasma AVP was unaffected by tilting head-up for 2 h, or by a non-hypotensive bleeding of 500 ml in 10 min. In the dog, haemorrhage of 5 ml/kg and over caused proportionate increases in AVP in the circulation. In normal men, plasma vasopressin was significantly correlated with concurrent urinary osmolality. Five patients with oat-cell bronchial carcinoma and hyponatraemia showed a marked increase of plasma vasopressin. Five patients with diabetes insipidus had significantly reduced, but detectable, levels of plasma AVP. The plasma concentration in these patients did not increase after water restriction.
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PMID:A radioimmunoassay for plasma arginine-vasopressin in man and dog: application to physiological and pathological states. 16 97

Immunoactive antidiuretic hormone (ADH) was measured by radioimmunoassay in the plasma, lung tumours and metastatic tumours of nineteen patients with bronchogenic carcinoma. Ten patients had hyponatraemia and carcinoma of the small oat cell type. Plasma ADH measured in nine of these patients ranged from 11--270 pg/ml and was elevated above the normal range (4.6--6.2 pg/ml) in all subjects. ADH-immunoreactive material was detectable in all primary lung tumours (range 9--1080 pg/mg wet weight, n = 7) and metastases (range 5--63 pg/mg wet weight, n = 9) obtained from the hyponatraemic patients. A statistical relationship existed between plasma and tumour ADH concentration in six patients where both measurements were performed. Three patients had small cell carcinomas (two oat cell and one anaplastic) without overt hyponatraemia. ADH-like material was detectable in the lung tumours (18 and 1.1 pg/mg wet weight) and liver metastases (4 and 1.0 pg/mg wet weight) of two patients but not in the third. Four of the remaining patients had squamous cell carcinomas and two had adenocarcinomas. None had hyponatraemia. ADH-like material was undetectable in all lung tumours, metastatic tumours and uninvolved tissue from these patients. ADH extracted from the pituitaries of four patients ranged from 6400--13200 pg/mg wet weight. ADH immunoreactive extracts of six lung tumours and nine metastases (all oat cell) showed the same pattern on elution from a Sephadex G-25 column. A large peak, which made up 65% of the total activity, was eluted in the same position as synthetic arginine vasopressin and contained comparable amounts of immunoreactive and bioactive ADH. Two smaller peaks (8 and 27% of total activity) were eluted in positions of higher molecular weight and contained more immunoreactive than bioactive ADH. In contrast, three of four pituitary extracts showed only a single peak which eluted in the same position as marker vasopressin.
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PMID:Antidiuretic hormone in bronchogenic carcinoma. 21 59

Serum potassium concentration was normal (greater than or equal to 3.6 mmol/l) in 29 of 32 patients with the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone excess (SIADH) associated with a bronchogenic carcinoma. In 11 of the patients there was no significant change in serum potassium concentration after correction of the syndrome, by fluid restriction. Hypokalaemia is thus an uncommon finding in SIADH due to bronchogenic carcinomas.
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PMID:Potassium in the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion. 53 60

Twenty-six patients with the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone were reviewed. The underlying diseases were bronchogenic carcinoma (12 cases); myxoedema (five cases); diseases of the nervous system (five cases); bronchopneumonia, carcinoma of the oesophagus, acute intermittent porphria and chlorpropamide therapy (each one case). Serum sodium levels ranged between 104 and 125 mEq per litre. Eighteen patients presented neurological manifestations, which in 14 were considered to be due to hyponatraemia. Neurological signs included disorders of consciousness (stage I and II coma), extrapyramidal signs, asterixis and epileptic seizures. An hyponatraemic coma was the first manifestation of the syndrome in five cases. In all cases where the EEG was recorded it showed non-specific signs of metabolic coma. The fundi never showed signs of intracranial hypertension. Blood urea and creatinine levels were invariably low in the euthyroid patients; these values were normal or elevated in patients with myxoedema and hyponatraemia. Hypokalaemia was frequent, and hypocalcaemia constant. In eleven cases an excess of water intake revealed the clinical syndrome: six patients were excessive beer drinkers and five had received extensive intravenous infusions. In one case the deleterious effect of diuretics was evident, and in another, the syndrome became evident during radiotherapy of an oesophageal tumour. Treatment of the syndrome was successful in all cases. A review of the literature concerning the various pathogenic mechanisms corresponding to the different underlying diseases is presented. The concept of aberrant hormonal production by a tumour is illustrated by an electron microscopic study.
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PMID:Clinical, biological and pathogenic features of the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone. A review of 26 cases with marked hyponatraemia. 100 53

A study of plasma arginine vasopressin in 17 patients with the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) associated with bronchogenic carcinoma, revealed that the arginine vasopressin levels were distinctly elevated in most. In 14 patients with bronchogenic carcinoma, but without overt SIADH, plasma levels of arginine vasopressin were significantly higher than in normal subjects (p less than 0.001). This, together with the finding of a lower than normal plasma osmolality in this group, suggests that inappropriate ADH excess might be much more common in patients with bronchogenic carcinoma than previously thought. The normal positive correlation between plasma osmolality and plasma arginine vasopressin was found to be reversed in SIADH. Seven of nine patients with overt SIADH, studied after fluid deprivation, showed an increase in plasma arginine vasopressin coincident with an increase in plasma osmolality (r = +0.8, p less than 0.01); in one patient, plasma arginine vasopressin returned to the original level following rehydration. The possibility that this might imply a degree of physiologic control to what is generally considered an autonomous secretion is discussed. It is, however, considered more likely that other factors, including changes in plasma volume and glomerular filtration, might explain the increase in plasma levels of arginine vasopressin.
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PMID:Plasma arginine vasopressin in the syndrome of antidiuretic hormone excess associated with bronchogenic carcinoma. 100 69

A radioimmunoassay method for the measurement of arginine-vasopressin (AVP) in human plasma has been developed which requires 5 ml of plasma and has a lower limit of detection of 1-8 pg/ml plasma. Arginine-vasopressin was found to be stable in whole blood for up to 1 h at room temperature and for at least 4 h at 4 degrees C, while in plasma stored at -20 degrees C no loss was seen over 10 days. Dehydration and rehydration in normal subjects produced appropriate changes in AVP concentration but there was considerable variability in the levels attained by individual subjects and no obvious correlation with plasma osmolality. No consistent increase in plasma AVP concentration was seen on change of posture from the recumbent to the upright position. Vigorous exercise produced a marked rise in plasma AVP concentrations in most subjects which could not be attributed simply to an increase in plasma osmolality. In fusion studies with Pitressin in normal subjects showed a mean half-life of 6-4 min with an overall plasma clearance rate of 8-5 ml/min/kg body weight and a mean volume of distribution of 5-33 l. In patients with a biochemical picture suggestive of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion, markedly raised plasma AVP concentrations were found only in patients with bronchial carcinoma.
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PMID:Radioimmunoassay of plasma vasopressin in physiological and pathological states in man. 120 69

A radioimmunoassay specific for arginine-vasopressin (AVP) developed in recent years has been applied to measurement of urinary AVP during physiological and clinical studies. Daily excretion of AVP was 34 +/- 10 ng (mean +/- SD) in 17 female normals and 69 +/- 45 ng in 17 male normals, this being a significant difference (p less than 0.01). After osmolar load (Carter-Robbins test) hourly excretion of AVP increased significantly in 7 males from 1.3 to 3.1 ng/h and in 6 females from 1.7 to 6.5 ng/h. Again the difference between male and female normals was significant. In both sexes a significant correlation between AVP excretion and either plasma osmolality or free-water clearance was found. When the osmolar load test was performed under constant angiotensin II perfusion in male subjects, their AVP excretion was significantly more elevated; this confirmed in man the hypothesis that angiotensin II is a stimulus to AVP secretion. Preliminary results of AVP excretion and response to osmolar load in diabetes insipidus are reported. Exceedingly high rate of excretion of AVP up to 55 330 ng/24 h have been found in cases of bronchial carcinoma with dilutional hyponatremia.
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PMID:[Clinical application of the radioimmunological measurement of the antidiuretic hormone]. 121 57

The role of vasopressin in human hypertension was examined in a series of studies. In patients with primary hyperaldosteronism and benign essential hypertension, circulating vasopressin was generally lower than in normotensive subjects. In contrast, plasma vasopressin was increased (p less than 0.001) in patients with malignant-phase hypertension. However, compared to infused vasopressin in normal subjects, when plasma levels of up to 120 pg/ml did not affect blood pressure, the increased levels found in malignant hypertension could not account for the hypertension. The possibility that there may be an increased pressor sensitivity to vasopressin in hypertension was examined by infusing the peptide into nine patients with essential hypertension. This showed a slight increase in sensitivity compared to normotensive subjects, but again this was insufficient to account for the discrepancy between the circulating level of vasopressin and the extent of the raised blood pressure in the hypertensive patients. The effect of chronically elevated levels of vasopressin was studied in a group of patients with the syndrome of inappropriate ADH excess as a consequence of bronchogenic carcinoma. In spite of having chronically elevated levels of vasopressin, these patients had normal blood pressures for their age and sex. Our results suggest that, although vasopressin is elevated in malignant hypertension, it does not contribute significantly to the raised blood pressure, and its increase is probably a consequence of volume shrinkage through renal salt and water loss.
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PMID:Vasopressin and hypertension in man. 243 62

Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone (SIADH) is a condition characterized by serum hypoosmolality and hyponatremia, resulting from the aberrant or sustained secretion of antidiuretic hormone (ADH). Its most frequent cause is malignancy, of which small cell or oat cell bronchogenic carcinoma is most common. Because it mimics the clinical manifestations of various disorders, SIADH often is difficult to diagnose. However, with early detection and prompt management, it can be reversed. The oncology nurse frequently is in a position to assist in the early recognition of this condition. The ability to maintain a high index of suspicion for patients at risk is critical to prompt recognition. Familiarity with the conditions that lead to this crisis and its early signs are essential to establishing a diagnosis and administering prompt treatment.
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PMID:Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone: assessment and nursing implications. 266 Jan 20


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