Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A prospective study of
bacterial meningitis
in children was initiated two years ago. Serum sodium concentrations below 135 MEQ/liter were noted on admission in 72 of 124 (58.1 %) of patients enrolled in the study protocol. Low initial serum sodium concentration and prolonged depression in serum sodium despite fluid restriction correlated significanly (P less than 0.001 to 0.01) with the presence of neurologic sequelae of the disease. Inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
as the cause of these electrolyte changes could be inferred by indirect measurement of serum and urine solute and volume data and was specifically documented, in patients enrolled most recently, by specific radioimmunoassay of
antidiuretic hormone
.
...
PMID:Inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone in children with bacterial meningitis. 90 60
As part of a prospective study of children with
bacterial meningitis
we analyzed in 36 patients of our hospital the fluid balance on admission and during the first three days of treatment. On admission 10 of them (28%) had inappropriate
antidiuretic hormone
secretion SIADH, 10 (28%) hypo-osmolal and 10 (28%) iso-osmolal contraction. Six patients (17%) had no clear fluid disorder. The patients with SIADH had significantly lower mean serum NA+ (127 vs. 132 mEq/l, p less than 0.01) and higher mean urine Na+ (111 vs. 26 mEq/l, p less than 0.01) concentration as well as higher mean urinary Na+/K+ ratio (2.23 vs. 0.365, p less than 0.005) than the patients with hypo-osmolal contraction. They also tended to be younger and have a shorter history of fever. The patients with SIADH had a less strict fluid restriction than the patients with hypo-osmolal contraction, and their fluid balance normalized more slowly. Our findings support initial water restriction for all children with
bacterial meningitis
.
...
PMID:Types of fluid disorder in children with bacterial meningitis. 175 Mar 36
We measured urine
vasopressin
(VP) once daily on days 1 through 3 in 18 patients hospitalized with meningitis. Urine VP values were 215 +/- 100, 116 +/- 44, and 69 +/- 23 pg/mL on days 1 through 3, respectively, for children with
bacterial meningitis
and 34 +/- 14, 20 +/- 4, and 15 +/- 4 pg/mL for those with aseptic meningitis. Urinary VP levels of infants with
bacterial meningitis
were significantly greater than those of healthy ambulatory subjects (n = 18) on all three study days; VP values of infants with
bacterial meningitis
were also greater than those of infants with aseptic meningitis on study days 2 and 3. The VP levels for the subjects with aseptic meningitis were significantly greater than those of the controls on day 1 only. None of the infants exhibited the clinical syndrome of inappropriate
antidiuretic hormone
secretion.
...
PMID:Vasopressin levels in infants during the course of aseptic and bacterial meningitis. 162 52
We hypothesized that plasma arginine vasopressin (AVP) concentrations in children with meningitis are appropriate for the children's degree of hypovolemia, even though the concentrations were higher than expected for the serum osmolality. A randomized study was conducted to compare the effect on plasma AVP concentrations of giving maintenance fluid requirements plus replacement of any deficit versus restricting fluids to two thirds of maintenance requirements for 24 hours. Plasma AVP concentrations and serum osmolality were measured before fluid therapy was begun and again after 24 hours. Nineteen children, 2 months to 17 years of age, were studied; 13 had
bacterial meningitis
(12 with Haemophilus influenzae type b). Ten children (seven with
bacterial meningitis
) received a mean of 1.42 times the calculated maintenance fluid requirements, and nine (six with
bacterial meningitis
) were restricted to a mean of 0.65 times maintenance. Children in the maintenance group also received significantly more sodium (mean = 6.3 mEq/kg/24 hr) than children in the fluid-restricted group (mean = 2.0 mEq/kg/24 hr). The two groups were comparable for plasma AVP concentration and serum osmolality before fluid therapy was begun. The plasma AVP concentration was significantly lower after 24 hours of maintenance plus replacement fluids than after fluid restriction (p = 0.005), and the change in AVP concentration correlated with the amount of sodium given (p less than 0.02). This study supports the hypothesis that serum AVP concentrations are elevated in patients with meningitis because of hypovolemia and become normal when sufficient sodium is given to facilitate reabsorption of water by the proximal tubule of the kidney. Patients with meningitis can be given maintenance plus replacement fluids but should be monitored for the development of the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
.
...
PMID:Normalization of plasma arginine vasopressin concentrations when children with meningitis are given maintenance plus replacement fluid therapy. 204 Sep 43
Urinary excretion rates of
antidiuretic hormone
were determined by radioimmunoassay in children with bacterial (6) and viral (11) meningitis, and in children with other febrile illnesses (7). These values were compared to normal data obtained from 50 healthy, normally hydrated children ranging in age from 1 week to 9 years. Plasma sodium concentrations were measured in the sick children; urine osmolality and creatinine concentrations were measured in all children. Upon admission, all children with
bacterial meningitis
and 64% of those with viral meningitis had urinary
antidiuretic hormone
excretion rates greater than 2 S.D. above values obtained from age-matched controls. Fifty-seven percent of children with other febrile illnesses had similarly elevated
antidiuretic hormone
values; however, only in the bacterial and viral meningitis groups were
antidiuretic hormone
excretion rates inappropriate because they occurred when serum sodium concentrations were found to be normal or low normal (i.e., 136 +/- 2 mEq/L and 137 +/- 1 mEq/L, respectively). The average serum sodium in the group with other febrile illnesses was higher (146 +/- 5 mEq/L; p less than 0.05) and could represent an appropriate stimulus for
antidiuretic hormone
release. In spite of high levels of
antidiuretic hormone
, most viral meningitis patients did not concentrate their urine, probably because all except 2 were younger than 2 months of age. We conclude that viral meningitis, like
bacterial meningitis
, frequently is associated with inappropriate
antidiuretic hormone
secretion; however, most children with viral meningitis may be protected from developing hyponatremia because of their inability to concentrate their urine.
...
PMID:Inappropriate antidiuretic hormone in children with viral meningitis. 271 37
Serum sodium concentrations were measured in 93 children with pneumonia or
bacterial meningitis
on their admission to hospital. Hyponatraemia (sodium value 134 mmol/l or less) was present in 33 (45%) of the 73 children with pneumonia, and in 10 (50%) of the 20 children with
bacterial meningitis
. Increased secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
is common in children with pneumonia, as well as in children with meningitis. The maintenance fluid requirement in these children is usually about 50 ml/kg/per day, and children with hyponatraemia caused by water overload need even lower fluid intakes. In developing countries, most children with pneumonia and meningitis should be managed without intravenous fluid treatment.
...
PMID:Hyponatraemia associated with pneumonia or bacterial meningitis. 406 47
The role of
antidiuretic hormone
in maintaining normal water balance is review. The diagnosis of inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
is done when a patient presents hyponatremia with no evidence of volume depletion, urine osmolality that is inappropriately high for serum tonicity, and absence of intrinsic renal or adrenal disease. Among the various possible etiology, the most frequent corresponds to disorders of the central nervous system, particularly
bacterial meningitis
. The various methods of treatment, fluid restriction, Hantman method and lithium salts are discussed.
...
PMID:[Syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone in children (author's transl)]. 680 Feb 88
Sixty children aged from 1 month to 12 years (mean (SD) 3.18 (3.49) years) with acute
bacterial meningitis
were studied for the incidence, clinical manifestations and outcome of the inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
syndrome (SIADH). Serum sodium levels and osmolality of serum and urine were estimated on admission and on days 3 and 10. SIADH was diagnosed in 22 out of 60 cases (36.7%) on admission and in six of 48 cases (12.5%) on day 3. Hyponatraemia without SIADH, attributed to vomiting and fever, was detected in seven cases (11.7%). Serum sodium levels returned to normal within 48 hours in these cases. Serum osmolality and sodium levels took longer to return to normal values in patients with SIADH. However, none of the cases showed any evidence of SIADH on the 10th day. A significant correlation with SIADH was observed in cases with evidence of severe meningeal inflammation (p < 0.001). The incidence of SIADH was highest with Streptococcus pneumoniae (75%), followed by Haemophilus influenzae (57.1%). Overall mortality was 26.7%, and mortality was significantly higher (p < 0.001) in cases with SIADH, all of whom died during the 1st 72 hours. Ten out of 22 cases (45.4%) with SIADH who survived beyond the 1st 72 hours had an uneventful course even though all of them had biochemical evidence of SIADH on the 3rd day. Mortality was quite high also in children with severe malnutrition (75%) and in those with S. pneumoniae as the aetiological organism (75%).
...
PMID:Inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone in acute bacterial meningitis. 767 22
Sixty children with acute
bacterial meningitis
(ABM) were prospectively studied for their serum sodium values and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), serum and urinary osmolality. The results have been compared with 20 age and nutritionally matched controls. Even though mean serum osmolality (283.2 +/- 13.84 mOsm/kg) and serum sodium levels (130.5 +/- 8.15 mEq/L) were significantly lower in ABM in comparison to controls (p < 0.05 and < 0.001, respectively), the overall mean CSF osmolality in patients with ABM (282.5 +/- 12.3 mOsm/kg) was not significantly different as compared to controls (288.2 +/- 7.89 mOsm/kg). As expected, cases of ABM with syndrome of inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
(SIADH) had significantly lower CSF osmolality (272 +/- 9.42 mOsm/kg) as compared to those without SIADH (288.5 +/- 9.34 mOsm/kg) and controls (288.2 +/- 7.89 mOsm/kg). However, our observations indicate that whereas the mean CSF osmolality was lower than the serum osmolality in the control group as well as in ABM without SIADH, it was greater than serum osmolality in ABM with SIADH (p < 0.05). Our results suggest that in the presence of SIADH, hypo-osmolality of serum may eventually result in hypo-osmolality of CSF, but the fall in CSF osmolality is not of the same degree as that of serum. Low CSF osmolality was observed to be associated with an unfavorable prognosis (p < 0.05).
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid osmolal changes in bacterial meningitis. 807 10
Bacterial meningitis
has special clinical features in the newborn infant. Major complications and sequelae result from the infectious involvement of the CNS in the majority of these children. We studied 109 newborn infants with
bacterial meningitis
accompanied from January 1977 to April 1987. The mortality rate was 34.8%. Perinatal risk factors were not found. The majority (80.5%) were term newborn infants. The main signs at admission were convulsion (53.2%), bulging fontanel (37.6%) and apnea (20.2%), and the main symptoms were neurosensorial depression (64.2%), nursing refuse (64.2%), fever (50.5%) and irritability (35.8%). Complications during hospitalization were ventriculitis (34.9%), inappropriate
antidiuretic hormone
secretion syndrome (27.5%), subdural collection (8.3%), brain abscess (4.6%) and brain infarction (2.8%). Inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion syndrome and ventriculitis were closely associated with high mortality. Seventy one children survived: 44 (62%) had gross abnormalities at the neurologic examination, and 29 (40.8%) developed hydrocephalus. Neurological follow-up of these children is important. Prognostic can change along the course of long time follow-up.
...
PMID:[Bacterial meningitis in the neonatal period. Clinical evaluation and complications in 109 cases]. 821 34
1
2
Next >>