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)

Many patients with high spinal cord injury experience exaggerated blood pressure rises in response to bladder distension. To examine the humoral mechanisms associated with these responses, ECG heart rate, blood pressure and vasoactive hormone levels were measured at baseline and during bladder distension following slow bladder filling in 23 subjects: 9 high spinal lesion patients, 7 low spinal lesion patients and 7 normal control subjects. Systolic blood pressure rose significantly during bladder distension in the high spinal lesion group by an average of 56 mm Hg (48%) and diastolic blood pressure rose by 22 mm Hg (47%), while heart rate fell by a mean of 7.4 beats per minute (15%). By contrast, neither systolic or diastolic blood pressure nor heart rate changed significantly during bladder distension in the low spinal lesion or normal control group. There were no significant changes in plasma levels of noradrenaline, renin, aldosterone, vasopressin, arginine, or atrial natriuretic peptide during bladder distension to account for the blood pressure rise in the high spinal lesion group. These findings suggest that humoral mechanisms are unlikely to play a major role in the mediation of pressor responses to bladder distension in high spinal lesion patients.
Paraplegia 1992 May
PMID:Cardiovascular and vasoactive hormone responses to bladder distension in spinal and normal man. 159 76

Plasma levels of beta-endorphin, vasopressin and cortisol during head-up tilt were measured in tetraplegic patients and in normal healthy subjects. In tetraplegic patients rapid tilt from the horizontal to 30 degrees or 60 degrees head-up induced orthostatic hypotension and increased plasma levels of cortisol, beta-endorphin and vasopressin. In control subjects head-up tilt failed to alter plasma levels of these hormones. These data show that the head-up position in tetraplegics causes various endocrine reactions.
Paraplegia 1991 Feb
PMID:Release of vasopressin, cortisol and beta-endorphin in tetraplegic subjects in response to head-up tilt. 202 76

Hyponatremia has proven to be a common finding in spinal cord injured (SCI) patients. Mechanisms exist whereby SCI patients with either normal or impaired renal function may develop it. One such mechanism may be an impairment in prostaglandin (PGE2) excretion resulting in unopposed activity of antidiuretic hormone (ADH). Paired 24-hour urine collections for PGE2 were collected from SCI patients with varying degrees of renal dysfunction. There was a wide interpatient variability in the excretion of PGE2, with no significant correlation of PGE2 excretion in respect to either urine volume, urine sodium concentration, or the degree of renal dysfunction.
J Am Paraplegia Soc 1984 Apr
PMID:Prostaglandin E2 excretion in spinal cord injury patients. 658 4

Chronic cervical spinal cord injury is characterized by defects in sodium and water homeostasis and defects of adaptive hormonal responses. The plasma osmolality is maintained in a relatively narrow range, the lower limit of which is determined by osmotic threshold for vasopressin release and the upper limit by the third threshold. Antidiuretic hormone as an important mediator of fluid and electrolyte balance was well investigated in able bodied children comparing children with normal voiding pattern and children with enuresis. The normal subjects were found to have higher plasma ADH at night, not detected in the group with enuresis. The findings were similar in elderly patients with increased diuresis at night, suggesting an important role of ADH in nocturnal decrease of urine output. Investigators studied the effect of rapid tilt on plasma ADH in tetraplegic compared with normal subjects, but there are no data available in the literature regarding ADH and its effects on water and electrolyte balance in healthy tetraplegic subjects with a normal lifestyle. We decided to undertake a pilot study to attempt to establish baseline ADH levels in this subject group, to better understand and manage tetraplegic patients with water and electrolyte dysregulation. Our preliminary data suggest that these individuals lack the normal diurnal variation of ADH, a phenomenon similar to that demonstrated in enuretic children and elderly, and furthermore appear to have generally depressed ADH levels.
Paraplegia 1995 Feb
PMID:Antidiuretic hormone levels and polyuria in spinal cord injury. A preliminary report. 775 75

The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy of desmopressin (DDAVP), a synthetic analogue of antidiuretic hormone, as an alternative therapy in the management of spinal cord injured (SCI) patients with neurogenic bladder dysfunction unresponsive to conventional therapy. Seven SCI patients (three men and four women) were treated with DDAVP after urodynamic evaluation. Despite treatment with anticholinergic agents, urodynamic evaluation demonstrated uninhibited detrusor contractions exceeding 30 cm H2O pressure at less than 300 ml cystometric capacity in all seven patients. Three patients had been managed with intermittent self-catheterization, but had socially unacceptable short intervals between catheterizations. Two women with incomplete injury were afflicted with significant nocturia (> 3 episodes/night). The remaining two patients managed with intermittent self-catheterization were troubled with nocturnal enuresis. The patients received 10 micrograms intranasal DDAVP once every 24 hours. Prior to DDAVP administration, the four patients who used DDAVP nightly experienced a median of four episodes of nocturia. After one month of DDAVP treatment, two patients had only one episode of nocturia per night and in the other two patients, nocturnal enuresis was completely eliminated. Three patients used daytime DDAVP administration at work to avoid frequent catheterization. The median period between bladder catheterizations increased from 2.5 hours before DDAVP to 6 hours while using DDAVP. Symptomatic improvement persisted during the follow-up period of 6-20 months (mean = 12). Side effects were infrequent; only one patient complained of transient headaches. Neither hyponatremia nor serum electrolyte abnormalities occurred. Our preliminary results suggest that DDAVP is safe and effective in the symptomatic management of complicated neurogenic bladder dysfunction in selected SCI patients.
J Am Paraplegia Soc 1994 Oct
PMID:DDAVP in the urological management of the difficult neurogenic bladder in spinal cord injury: preliminary report. 786 58

Oliguria in patients following spinal cord injury was first mentioned in 1649, but has since been referred to only occasionally. The work detailed here was completed 30 years ago but is reported because of the lack of any comparable study and because suitable patients are not now readily available. A total of 27 water load tests were carried out on 20 patients. The test included measurement of serum osmolality to confirm absorption of ingested water. Impaired response to the water load was obtained in 17 tests: 12/13 between 1 and 5 days after onset of the cord lesion and 5/14 more than 2 weeks after injury. The possibilities that oliguria was due to dehydration, failure to absorb ingested water, hypotension or renal failure are discounted. In the first few days after injury, oliguria may be due to release of antidiuretic hormone as part of the metabolic response to trauma. The impaired response seen later is discussed in relation to possible neural and hormonal mechanisms. There is a need for further study of factors influencing water excretion in tetraplegic and paraplegic patients.
Paraplegia 1995 Dec
PMID:The reduced urinary output after spinal cord injury: a review. 892 12