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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hyponatremia with simultaneous renal sodium loss was associated with the inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
in a dog with heartworm disease. Antidiuresis caused expansion of extracellular fluid volume, which induced renal salt wasting and a negative sodium balance. The combination of water retention, salt wasting, and inactivation of intracellular solute contributes to the decrease in serum sodium concentration.
Water intoxication
due to hypotonicity of body gluids induced anorexia, depression, weakness, and incoordination.
...
PMID:Inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone in a dog. 50 Apr 39
Elevated plasma
antidiuretic hormone
(
ADH
) levels were noted in seven patients with status asthmaticus during the acute illness. These values returned to normal with resolution of the disease. The mechanism of this release is not completely understood but is consistent with the hypothesis that bronchospasm leads to decreased pulmonary blood flow, decreased volume return to the left atrium, and stimulation of the atrial volume receptors regulating
ADH
release. Planning for fluid therapy in patients with status asthmaticus should take into account a high probability of increased plasma
ADH
concentration during the acute illness.
Water intoxication
as well as hypoxia and hypercarbia should be considered as a possible cause of an altered state of consciousness associated with status asthmaticus.
...
PMID:Elevated plasma antidiuretic hormone levels in status asthmaticus. 124 95
Water intoxication
mostly occurs in psychiatric patients. We observed 13 episodes of severe hyponatremia (less than 120 mmol/l) following a period of increased water consumption in 10 psychiatric patients (5 men, 5 women, mean age 48.8 years) treated with neuroleptics and/or benzodiazepines. Other causes of hyponatremia were excluded. The initial clinical signs were associated with severe gastrointestinal and neurological disorders requiring intensive care. In every case a gradual return to normal of natremia was obtained by creating a negative water balance while compensating for the sodium loss. From a study of urine and plasma osmolality ratio (U/P osm) on admission, several physiopathological mechanisms could be envisaged. A U/P osm ratio lower than 1 (6 cases) suggested a water intake exceeding the maximum dilution capacity of the kidneys (20-25 1), or a lesser water intake with little or no osmolal intake, or again an intrarenal disorder of urine dilution. When the U/P osm ratio was higher than 1 (7 cases), reflecting inappropriate secretion of the
antidiuretic hormone
, the hyponatremia could be explained by the psychosis itself, the treatment taken by the patients, a disorder of thirst regulation and/or a non-osmotic stimulation of
vasopressin
. This population, therefore, was heterogeneous: the mechanisms which contribute to this pathology are not fully elucidated, and they probably involve several factors.
...
PMID:[Water intoxication in psychiatric patients. 13 cases of severe hyponatremia]. 248 2
Water intoxication
is a serious problem in many patients with chronic psychiatric illness. In an effort to determine the mechanism of this disorder, we investigated the osmoregulation of water intake and antidiuretic function in psychiatric patients with polydipsia and hyponatremia and in matched controls with psychiatric illness but neither polydipsia nor hyponatremia. We found that a water load suppressed plasma osmolality and
vasopressin
and urine osmolality in both groups, but that urinary dilution and free water clearance were impaired in the patients with hyponatremia, even though plasma levels of
vasopressin
and solute clearance were similar in the two groups. Moreover, during water loading and infusion of hypertonic saline, the plasma level of
vasopressin
was higher at any given plasma osmolality in the test patients than in the controls, indicating a downward resetting of the osmostat. Patients' estimates of the amount of water they desired were shown to correlate significantly with the amount of water consumed and, at any given level of plasma osmolality, appeared to be higher in the test patients than in the controls. We conclude that psychiatric patients with polydipsia and hyponatremia have unexplained defects in urinary dilution, the osmoregulation of water intake, and the secretion of
vasopressin
.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of altered water metabolism in psychotic patients with polydipsia and hyponatremia. 334 Jan 17
I retrospectively describe 20 episodes of water intoxication in 19 infants, with hypothermia, seizures, and hyponatremia. Overdilution of formula or aggressive supplementation with water or clear juices were documented in 16 of the 20 episodes. Seizures and respiratory distress were severe enough in six cases to require intubation and ventilatory support. Marked diaphoresis was noted as a premonitory symptom to seizures in eight children. The children were an average of 5.1 +/- 4.3 months of age; serum sodium values averaged 118 +/- 4.3 mmol/L. No evidence of excess production of
antidiuretic hormone
was found.
Water intoxication
in infants is common, and I discuss its possible relationship to demyelinating disease of the central nervous system.
...
PMID:Seizures and hypothermia due to dietary water intoxication in infants. 356 73
Maximal renal concentrating ability after parenteral administration of repositol
antidiuretic hormone
was evaluated in 13 clinically normal dogs undergoing water diuresis. Urine specific gravity and osmolarity progressively increased in all dogs and generally attained maximum concentrations after 8 to 12 hours. Urine specific gravity values increased from mean of 1.003 +/- 0.001 mOsm/kg of water to a mean maximal value of 1.042 +/- 0.009 mOsm/kg. Urine osmolarity increased from a mean of 132 mOsm/kg to a mean maximal value of 1,518 +/- 242 mOsm/kg.
Water intoxication
was observed in all dogs due to continued administration of water after
antidiuretic hormone
administration.
...
PMID:Reposital vasopressin response test in clinically normal dogs undergoing water diuresis: technique and results. 718 Nov 97
Acute symptomatic hyponatraemia is a life-threatening emergency which must be diagnosed and treated promptly. The initial symptoms are often dramatic, with seizures and coma, and there is therefore a risk that the diagnosis and the urgent sodium correction therapy may be delayed by procedures such as computed tomography (CT) of the brain. As the most common aetiological factors are psychotic polydipsia and different iatrogenic causes, this condition usually develops in hospitalised patients.
Water intoxication
alone is very unlikely to cause severe hyponatraemia in a person with normal renal function, unless for some reason the
antidiuretic hormone
secretion is increased. We describe a case in which dehydration due to common gastroenteritis in combination with excessive intake of water caused the death of a young, previously healthy woman. Increased awareness of this potentially fatal condition is recommended.
...
PMID:Fatal hyponatraemic brain oedema due to common gastroenteritis with accidental water intoxication. 947 92
Water intoxication
is a serious condition which may be caused by desmopressin overdose, with reversible or irreversible neurological complications. In the past, desmopressin was used in endocrinological centers for the treatment of
antidiuretic hormone
deficiency (central diabetes insipidus). Indications for hormone treatment have since widened, especially as an effective solution for nocturnal enuresis. It is now often prescribed in community clinics, and its use has been encouraged by extensive promotion. We describe a 15-year-old boy with primary nocturnal enuresis who started treatment with desmopressin 1 year prior to admission. He was allowed to use the drug without supervision, and drank excessively. The result was water intoxication which required admission for intensive care because of loss of consciousness and convulsions for 36 hours.
...
PMID:[Water intoxication following desmopressin overdose]. 915 15
Hyponatremia is the most frequent electrolyte disorder. Two forms of it, the "true"--and "pseudo"--hyponatremia are known. The normal osmoregulation is an accurate operation which ensures the steadiness of serum sodium level by regulating
vasopressin
(ADH) release and water intake. Hyponatremia usually indicates water excess in the body, however, it may be complicated by sodium loss as well. It has hypovolemic, hypervolemic and normovolemic forms; the syndrome of inappropriate
antidiuretic hormone
(SIADH) is associated mostly with the normovolemic states. Nowadays the pathomechanism, criteria, diagnosis and etiologic factors of SIADH (water intoxication) are fairly well known, but the number of drugs capable of inducing this syndrome is increasing day by day. According to the newest knowledge, SIADH may exist not only in the acute but chronic form as well, which should be born in mind when treating water intoxicated patients. The basic principle is that in cases with mild clinical disturbances aggressive treatment should be avoided. For mild hyponatremia water restriction is usually sufficient, but in serious cases hypertonic saline infusion should be administered. Its speed has to be determined and adjusted carefully according to the needs of the patient, and it can be combined with the administration of furosemide, when necessary. Vasopressin antagonists are under clinical investigation, their therapeutic value has not yet been determined.
Water intoxication
is not rare-if one keeps it in mind. The syndrome's simple treatment can be life saving for the patient and provides an easy problem solution for the physician.
...
PMID:[Hyponatremia]. 943 52
Cyclophosphamide (CY) is an alkylating agent used to treat a variety of autoimmune disorders.
Water intoxication
is a well-known complication of high-dose intravenous (i.v.) CY, but is rare in patients treated with low dose i.v. CY. We describe two patients with lupus nephritis and water intoxication following low dose i.v. CY. The first patient was treated with oral prednisolone and azathioprine for eight weeks with inadequate response and persistent renal inflammatory activity. Eight hours after the first i.v. CY pulse she had a grand mal seizure. The second patient had WHO class III lupus nephritis, and after a single i.v. CY pulse developed vomiting, diarrhoea and grand mal seizures. They were both fluid-restricted and their serum sodium levels returned to normal. In conclusion, even at low doses i.v. CY may induce hyponatremia related to inappropriate
antidiuretic hormone
secretion. This potentially life-threatening complication of i.v. CY could be minimized by avoidance of overhydration following pulse i.v. CY.
...
PMID:Water intoxication induced by low-dose cyclophosphamide in two patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. 1294 25
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