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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Previous reports have described 5-20% prevalence of hyponatremia in extended care facilities, due largely to drugs or inappropriate
antidiuretic hormone
secretion. In our 400 bed VA extended care facility, 15 men with organic brain syndrome (Alzheimer's,
multi-infarct dementia
, anoxic encephalopathy or alcoholism) currently receive Isocal via gastrostomy as the sole source of nutrition. We noted intermittent hyponatremia in about half of these patients, and conducted a chart review to investigate the cause. Mean age was 68 yr (range 46-92); tube feeding duration was 3 mo.-3 yr; 266 Na concentrations were obtained from the charts. Simultaneous with these Na analyses, one of three diets prevailed: (A) mixed foods (3-6 g Na/day) orally before gastrostomy; (B) Isocal supplemented with NaCl to give 2 g Na/day; (C) unsupplemented Isocal providing 1 g Na/day. (B) and (C) had been randomly varied by rotating physicians. Serum Na was directly related to Na intake. On (A), Na was within normal range (135-145 mEq/l) in all men. One patient was hyponatremic during diet (B). During (C), eight patients were hyponatremic. Na was less than 135 mEq/l in 40% of all samples during diet (C) and less than 130 mEq/l in 14%. Changing from diet (A) or (B) to diet (C) caused nearly equivalent declines in Na and Cl; K and HCO-3 were unaffected. No hyponatremic patient took drugs known to cause hyponatremia, or had congestive heart failure, hypoalbuminemia, lipemia or fasting hyperglycemia. At the end of the study, four hyponatremic men were changed from (C) to (B); serum Na became normal in all four patients, without edema or hypertension.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hyponatremia in tube-fed elderly men. 308 Apr 61
Changes in the activity of neurotransmitters in dementia were studied by measuring the activities of each of choline acetyltransferase (CAT), dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (DBH) and hydroxylase cofactor (tetrahydrobiopterine; BPH4), and the concentrations of homovanillic acid (HVA) and
vasopressin
. CAT activity was low in the cerebral cortex of patients with senile dementia of Alzheimer's type (SDAT). The CAT activity was high in the nucleus basalis, which correlated well with the CAT activity in the cerebral cortex, Brodmann areas 22 and 17. DBH activity was lower in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of SDAT and
multi-infarct dementia
(MID) patients than in that of control subjects. No age-related change was observed in control subjects. Serum DBH activity was decreased in patients with SDAT but not in patients with MID. DBH activity was especially low in the serum of SDAT patients with a low dementia rating score and/or severe brain atrophy shown on computed tomography (CT) scan. Serum DBH activity was also decreased in older normal subjects (greater than or equal to 80 years). The concentration of HVA in the CSF of control subjects decreased with the advance of age, but the decrease in HVA concentration was more pronounced in the CSF of SDAT patients, which would reflect the lowered dopaminergic activity in SDAT. BPH4 activity was also decreased in the CSF of SDAT patients. Arginine-
vasopressin
was widely demonstrated in the cerebral cortex of control subjects but could not be detected in many areas of the cerebral cortices of demented patients. These results suggest that a deficit of dopamine, noradrenaline or
vasopressin
as well as acetylcholine may occur in the brain of SDAT patients. The evidence presented points toward areas for consideration in the search for methods of therapy or prevention of SDAT.
...
PMID:Neurotransmitters in dementia. 615 97