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)

Two adult patients with unilateral hypoplastic optic nerves, absent septa pellucida and hypopituitarism are described. Patient 1, aged 20, presented with diabetes insipidus due to partial vasopressin deficiency. Patients 2, aged 29, presented with focal epilepsy. Both had short stature. They showed absent growth hormone (GH) response to insulin-hypoglycaemia or glucagon, but responded to 100 micrograms growth hormone releasing factor (GRF-44) with a rise in circulating GH, suggesting a hypothalamic defect in GH release though a co-existing pituitary defect cannot be excluded. Other hypothalamic-pituitary functions were normal. These two patients probably represent the milder form of the clinical spectrum of septo-optic dysplasia which, with the extensive use of CT brain scans, will be increasingly encountered by physicians attending adult patients.
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PMID:Hypothalamic defects in two adult patients with septo-optic dysplasia. 375 51

The use of carbamazepine (CBZ) and oxcarbazepine (OXC) as first-line antiepileptic drugs in the treatment of focal epilepsy is limited by hyponatremia, a known adverse effect. Hyponatremia occurs in up to half of people taking CBZ or OXC and, although often assumed to be asymptomatic, it can lead to symptoms ranging from unsteadiness and mild confusion to seizures and coma. Hyponatremia is probably due to the antidiuretic properties of CBZ and OXC that are, at least partly, explained by stimulation of the vasopressin 2 receptor/aquaporin 2 pathway. No known genetic risk variants for CBZ- and OXC-induced hyponatremia exist, but likely candidate genes are part of the vasopressin water reabsorption pathway.
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PMID:Epidemiology, pathophysiology and putative genetic basis of carbamazepine- and oxcarbazepine-induced hyponatremia. 2733 72