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)

In a previous report the long-term prognosis of 30 patients with renal scarring after pyelonephritis in childhood was described. In this study, we have related the extent of renal scarring present in childhood to the conditions in early adulthood. A radiological progression of scarring from childhood to adulthood was seen in one-third of the kidneys. The 7 patients with bilateral scarring in childhood had a smaller renal area, lower glomerular filtration rate and higher plasma vasopressin at follow-up than 13 healthy controls. The 20 patients who had unilateral scarring in childhood had a smaller renal area, lower glomerular filtration rate, higher diastolic blood pressure and higher plasma renin at follow-up than controls; 4 had hypertension. The most important finding was that children with unilateral disease are at risk of serious long-term complications. Filtration fraction at follow-up was higher in patients with extensive renal scarring in childhood compared with those with a normal renal area or small scars in childhood (r = -0.43, P less than 0.05). This may indicate glomerular hyperfiltration by remnant glomeruli. This paper emphasizes t the potential seriousness of childhood urinary tract infections especially when early infantile infections are overlooked. A follow-up of more than 4 decades may be necessary before the ultimate prognosis can be established, especially in patients with unilateral renal disease. It is advised that most patients with post-infectious renal scars are followed as high-risk patients, and that treatment continuity is established between paediatricians, nephrologists and, when required, obstetricians.
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PMID:Long-term prognosis of post-infectious renal scarring in relation to radiological findings in childhood--a 27-year follow-up. 153 35

All hyponatremic states have in common elevation of vasopressin. Without this the loss of salt would be followed by appropriate diuresis and normonatremia. If hyponatremia is triggered by a volume change as in heart failure or portal cirrhosis not only is ADH released but the mechanisms that control salt retention create an essentially sodium free urine, always less than 20 mEq/L. If the initial event is inappropriate ADH secretion whether it be cerebral disease, neoplasm, a pulmonary lesion or a growing list of drugs; there is no related signal for salt retention and urine sodium and tonicity are high, the latter usually higher than that of plasma. If salt loss is due to intrinsic renal disease, diuretics, osmotic or otherwise, or adrenal failure urinary sodium is variable depending upon the magnitude of the response to volume of salt retaining factors. Because hyponatremia is often present with major illness and because more than one factor may be involved in its genesis, the establishment of its origin and appropriate treatment remain a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge.
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PMID:Hyponatremia: manifestations and treatment. 162 51

Renal function in 32 subjects who had undergone unilateral nephrectomy (17 transplant donors and 15 subjects with unilateral renal disease) was compared with that of 22 normal subjects. The age-adjusted glomerular filtration rate was lower in transplant donors (79 +/- 15% of normal) than in those whose nephrectomy was performed for unilateral renal disease (90 +/- 12% of normal). The donors were also significantly older at nephrectomy (48 +/- 10 years versus 24 +/- 13 years, p less than 0.001). This finding may represent less capacity for compensatory hypertrophy. Proximal tubular and medullary function as assessed by 15-minute phenolsulfonphthalein excretion, maximum urinary concentration in response to water deprivation plus exogenous vasopressin, and urinary acidification in response to an oral acid load were all within normal limits for glomerular filtration rate. Overall renal function was well preserved after nephrectomy. A small number of patients did have increased cast excretion, which may signify the presence of mild renal disease in these subjects.
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PMID:Renal function in unilateral nephrectomy subjects. 173 88

The pressor action of vasopressin (AVP) in humans was investigated with the specific anti-vasopressor V1 antagonist d(CH2)5-O(Me)-Tyr-AVP. A single 0.5-mg intravenous bolus of this agent inhibited the pressor effect of AVP by about 80%. Normally hydrated humans had no blood pressure response to this dose, but this agent did prevent the blood pressure rise in response to exogenous AVP given in doses up to 200 milli-units/kg. Patients with severe hypertension, especially that associated with end-stage renal disease, tended to respond with moderate increases in blood pressure and plasma AVP after sodium overload and had a modest blood pressure fall (10-20 mmHg) in response to a single intravenous bolus of the AVP antagonist. Patients with an impaired sympathetic nervous system had increased sensitivity to the pressor action of AVP, in keeping with knowledge derived from experimental studies. These data suggest an interaction between AVP and alpha-adrenergic function, whereby the latter tends to attenuate the pressor action of AVP although it facilitates the release of AVP in response to various stimuli. In patients with congestive heart failure, the direct pressor action of AVP appears to contribute to increased systemic vascular resistance in about 30% of cases, i.e., those with plasma AVP concentrations well above the normal range. In these subjects, circulating AVP concentrations correlated with a decrease in vascular resistance in response to the V1 antagonist.
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PMID:Role of vasopressin in clinical hypertension and congestive cardiac failure: interaction with the sympathetic nervous system. 191 97

About 30% of hemodialyzed patients are suffering from chronic fluid overload despite advice to restrict the oral fluid intake. To investigate the cause of the abnormal drinking behaviour a clinical study was performed in 51 non-diabetic patients with endstage renal disease exhibiting lower interdialysis weight gain (less than 3 kg, n = 17) and increased interdialysis weight gain (greater than 3 kg, n = 34). Blood pressure, body weight self-estimated thirst intensity before and after hemodialysis were analyzed. Biochemical and behavioral variables were measured including hormonal factors of water and sodium metabolism. Significant differences of dry weight, creatinine, urea nitrogen and thirst intensity were found between the two groups. Catecholamines, renin, angiotensin II, aldosterone, vasopressin and atrial natriuretic peptide exhibited a similar pattern in both groups. Atrial natriuretic peptide decreased during hemodialysis in both groups, angiotensin II, however, and norepinephrine showed an exaggerated response to ultrafiltration rate in polydipsic patients. These results suggest that changes in serum osmolality during hemodialysis did not contribute to thirst and drinking behaviour. It seems that postdialytic hypovolaemia together with higher plasma-angiotensin II-levels is responsible for increased oral intake of fluid and excessive weight gain.
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PMID:[Regulation of thirst in end-stage kidney insufficiency]. 214 56

Enhanced prostaglandin production is postulated to contribute to altered vascular reactivity and glomerular hyperfiltration in early insulin-deficient diabetes mellitus. Rats with streptozocin-induced diabetes (STZ-D) show glomerular hyperfiltration and develop renal disease. BB rats with genetic diabetes (BB-D) also hyperfilter but have only minor renal lesions. We therefore compared glomerular and mesangial prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) production and glomerular contractility in response to pressors as a reflection of in vitro vascular reactivity in these models. Glomeruli isolated from rats with 3 wk of STZ-D produced significantly more PGE2 under basal and ionophore A23187-stimulated conditions than those from control rats. Glomeruli from BB-D rats under basal and stimulated conditions, however, generated amounts of PGE2 that were comparable to either those of nondiabetic littermates or of normal Wistar rats. Mesangial cells cultured from glomeruli of STZ-D, BB-D, and control rats all had identical prostaglandin profiles judged by conversion of [14 C]arachidonic acid. They also produced comparable amounts of PGE2 under basal conditions and after stimulation with angiotensin II or A23187, as determined by radioimmunoassay. Planar surface area of glomeruli isolated from control rats showed a dose-dependent decrease in response to angiotensin II (10(-11)-10(-9) M). This response to angiotensin II was at least as great in glomeruli from STZ-D rats. Contraction of glomeruli from control and STZ-D rats was also comparable after vasopressin or norepinephrine. Similarly, glomeruli from BB-D and BB control rats contracted in a comparable fashion to angiotensin II and norepinephrine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Comparison of glomerular and mesangial prostaglandin synthesis and glomerular contraction in two rat models of diabetes mellitus. 311 6

The blood pressure changes and behavior of vasoactive hormones after various stimuli were studied in eighteen patients with end-stage renal disease maintained on chronic hemodialysis. Group A patients (n = 9) were not subject to intra- or post-dialysis hypotensive episodes, and Group B (n = 9) frequently had such episodes. A 500 ml hypertonic saline infusion produced no change in blood pressure in either group, despite significant rise of vasopressin levels in both. Plasma renin activity levels were similar and became appropriately suppressed by the infusion in both groups, whereas norepinephrine rose significantly only in Group A, but not Group B where it was already higher at baseline. The regular dialysis session produced, as expected, a significantly more profound hypotensive effect in Group B, but was accompanied in both groups by decrease in vasopressin and increase in plasma renin activity. Norepinephrine change differed in the two groups: it decreased in Group A as expected from its capacity to be dialyzed, but rose in several hypotensive patients in Group B, indicating appropriate response to baroreceptor stimulation and leading to an unchanged average. These findings suggest that dialysis-induced hypotensive episodes are not necessarily associated with autonomic neuropathy or with abnormal patterns of vasopressor hormone response to stimuli. They also shed new light on the factors regulating vasopressin secretion under these circumstances, since they indicate that the osmoreceptor and/or sodium-sensitive receptor may be a more dominant mechanism in the regulation of vasopressin release than the volumetric mechanism responding to fluid volume changes.
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PMID:Vasopressin in end-stage renal disease: relationship to salt, catecholamines and renin activity. 330 33

To determine the nature, extent, and severity of renal involvement in Laurence-Moon-Biedl syndrome (obesity, mental retardation, polydactyly, hypogonadism, and pigmented retinal dystrophy), we evaluated 20 of 30 patients with the disorder identified from ophthalmologic records in Newfoundland. The mean age was 31 years, and seven were male. All 20 patients had structural or functional abnormalities of the kidneys or both. Three had end-stage renal disease, with two requiring maintenance hemodialysis. The remaining 17 patients had normal serum creatinine values and estimated creatinine clearances. Half the subjects had hypertension. Fourteen of 17 patients could not concentrate urine above 750 mOsm per kilogram of body weight even after vasopressin, whereas all 10 normal controls could. Urinary pH decreased below 5.3 after ammonium chloride administration in all 15 normal controls, but in only 13 of 18 patients. Calyceal clubbing or blunting was evident in 18 of 19 patients studied by intravenous pyelography; 13 patients had calyceal cysts or diverticula. Seventeen of 19 patients had lobulated renal outlines of the fetal type. Four patients had diffuse renal cortical loss, but only two of these had renal insufficiency. We conclude that Laurence-Moon-Biedl syndrome includes the presence of renal abnormalities.
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PMID:The spectrum of renal disease in Laurence-Moon-Biedl syndrome. 341 78

The long-term results of surgical and specific drug therapy were compared in a group of 57 patients with primary aldosteronism (PA) (46 with aldosterone-producing adenoma (APA), 11 with idiopathic hyperaldosteronism (IHA) and bilateral adrenal hyperplasia). Unilateral adrenalectomy completely normalized blood pressure (BP) in 77.1% of surgically treated APA, evidently improving hypertension in remaining 22.9%. No recurrence of the adenoma in the remaining adrenal was seen in any of the surgical APA cases. In 19 of the non-surgical patients (11 with APA, 8 with IHA) monotherapy with spironolactone reduced blood pressure in 73%, though total BP normalization was an exception. The treatment normalized hypokalemia, low total exchangeable potassium, tendency to hypernatremia, and high total exchangeable sodium. Surgical as well as conservative therapy increased to normal or above-normal levels plasma renin activity suppressed prior to treatment. Pre-operatively high urine and plasma aldosterone levels normalized in all adrenalectomized patients, but remained above the normal range during spironolactone therapy in spite of a small decline in its absolute values. The disturbances of maximum renal concentrating capacity due to impaired nephron responsiveness to sufficiently high endogenous vasopressin concentrations were completely eliminated after kaliopenic nephropathy had been repaired. The other renal functions remained within normal values. Echocardiographically diagnosed left ventricular hypertrophy was seen less often than in the other types of arterial hypertension, tending to regress after APA management. Our longitudinal study (2-16 years) showed primary aldosteronism as a well curable, albeit rare, cause of hypertension. As regards BP and laboratory tests normalization, better results were achieved in surgical APA cases than in patients treated with spironolactone. Older age, longer history of hypertension and more frequent incidence of obesity, nephrosclerosis and pyelonephritis may be responsible for hypertension persisting after surgical treatment.
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PMID:Long-term results of surgical and conservative treatment of patients with primary aldosteronism. 345 May 33

We report two infants with pseudotumor cerebri associated with renal disease. The pathogenesis of increased intracranial pressure in this clinical setting is unclear, but may be mediated by one or more of the conditions commonly associated with pseudotumor cerebri, including sinus thrombosis, increased intravascular fluid volume, anemia, and endocrine disturbances resulting in abnormal calcium and phosphorus metabolism. The onset of pseudotumor cerebri also may be related to changes in vasopressin levels that affect brain water permeability.
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PMID:Pseudotumor cerebri associated with obstructive nephropathy. 350 95


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