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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of transient
nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
occurred in late pregnancy, the first associated with biopsy-proven hepatitis. Five previously reported cases occurred in pregnancy. All six patients demonstrated similar but transient signs, symptoms and laboratory abnormalities suggesting a syndrome peculiar to pregnancy. The characteristics of this syndrome are elevated liver function studies, decreased renal function, hyperuricemia and transient
vasopressin
-resistant diabetes insipidus.
...
PMID:Vasopressin-resistant diabetes insipidus, liver dysfunction, hyperuricemia and decreased renal function. A case report. 343 Apr 94
We describe a patient with chronic hypernatraemia (plasma sodium 148-155 mmol/l) and partial
nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
who had received prolonged lithium treatment. Despite stopping the drug for one year the abnormalities remained. Infusion of hypertonic saline (NaCl 855 mmol/l) allowed the characterization of osmoregulation of thirst and
vasopressin
secretion. Linear regression analysis of plasma
vasopressin
and osmolality defined the function, pAVP = 0.27 (pOsm - 301), and analysis of thirst measured by a visual analogue scale and plasma osmolality, the function, thirst = 0.16 (pOsm - 302) where pAVP and pOsm represent plasma arginine vasopressin and osmolality respectively. The slopes of the regression lines which describe the sensitivity of the osmoreceptors were within the normal range, but both abscissal intercepts, which define the thresholds for
vasopressin
release and thirst, were markedly elevated in comparison to normal (upper limit less than 290 mOsm/kg). Other investigations of electrolytes, anterior pituitary function and high definition computed tomographic scanning of hypothalamo-pituitary region were all normal. We conclude that this patient's chronic hypernatraemia was due to resetting of the osmostats for both
vasopressin
release and thirst, a rarely described mechanism to account for hypernatraemia. Although it is probable that the partial
nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
was related to prolonged lithium therapy, the cause of the reset osmostats remains unclear.
...
PMID:Hypernatraemia due to a reset osmostat for vasopressin release and thirst, complicated by nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. 345 Dec 25
The direct measurements of AVP during water deprivation and salt loading demonstrate the inability of the direct water deprivation test to distinguish accurately between several forms of polyuria. Polyuria and polydipsia are commonly formed disorders in the dog and can be caused by osmotic diuresis; deficient release of anti-diuretic hormone-arginine vasopressin (AVP); a decreased renal response to AVP; excessive water intake. The differentiation between these forms often requires a water deprivation test followed by administration of
vasopressin
. The latter test is an indirect one and relies upon changes in urinary concentration as index of
vasopressin
function. With this it is usually possible to differentiate total neurogenic diabetes insipidus and total
nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
. However, several dipsogenic forms and partial diabetes insipidus forms are still very difficult to distinguish from each other and only the direct measurement of plasma AVP (PAVP) can give conclusive information. The role of AVP in osmoregulation was investigated by measuring plasma osmolality (Posm) and PAVP during; hypertonic saline infusions; water deprivation in both healthy experimental dogs and in dogs with polyuria.
...
PMID:The use of arginine vasopressin measurements in the polyuric dog. 357 93
A 29-year-old nullipara was admitted at 31 weeks' gestation because of toxemia. She noted gradually polyuria, severe thirst, malaise, nausea and anorexia. A water-deprivation test and administration of aqueous
vasopressin
confirmed the diagnosis of
nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
. At 33 weeks' gestation, blood chemistry studies revealed moderately elevated transaminase levels and hyperuricemia. Male twins were delivered by vacuum extraction at 35 weeks' gestation. After delivery, she became drousy and icterus appeared. Acute hepatic failure with marked hyperuricemia was diagnosed. She was treated with glucose solution with glucagon and soluble insulin, branched chain amino acids, gabexate mesilate, lactulose and famotidine. Her consciousness cleared rapidly and all laboratory data became normal by 15 days postpartum. The urine volume was about 5 liters per day from the first to sixth postpartum day. The diuresis decreased after the eighth postpartum day. Rare pregnancy complicated by transient
nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
and acute hepatic failure is discussed.
...
PMID:Transient nephrogenic diabetes insipidus associated with acute hepatic failure in pregnancy. 365 42
Fluorescence histochemical and immunocytochemical techniques were used to investigate morphologic correlates of the relationship between catecholamine varicosities and
vasopressin
-containing perikarya in an animal model of
vasopressin
excess, the
nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
mouse. Our results show hypertrophy and increased immunoreactivity in
vasopressin
neurons in these mice were accompanied by a marked increase in the density and to some extent the fluorescence intensity of catecholamine varicosities within the supraoptic nucleus. These results further support the concept of functional interactions between catecholamine and
vasopressin
neurons and raise the possibility that the target neuron, or one of its products, perhaps
vasopressin
, either exerts a trophic influence on the catecholamine innervation pattern of the supraoptic nucleus or enhances catecholamine content in existing fibers and terminals.
...
PMID:Altered catecholamine innervation of the supraoptic nucleus in the nephrogenic diabetes insipidus mouse. 390 37
The effects of water deprivation and the injection of deamino [8-D-arginine]
vasopressin
(dDAVP) on the metabolic activity of the hypothalamo-neurohypophysial neurones of mice with inherited
nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
(DI +/+ Severe) have been investigated by quantitative autoradiography using the [14C]2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) technique. The relative metabolic activities (rma) of the paraventricular nuclei (PVN) and pars nervosa (PN) in severely diabetic mice were not significantly different from the rma of the PVN and PN in Non-severe or Normal mice, but the rma of the pars distalis (PD) was greater in the Severe mice than in the other two strains. Water deprivation (4-5 h) significantly increased the rma of the PVN and PN in Severe mice compared with those in Non-severe mice that had been similarly deprived of water. The increased rma of the PVN and PN produced by water deprivation in Severe mice was not reduced to normal by injection of dDAVP. The injection of dDAVP alone had no effect on the rma of the PVN or PN, but dDAVP injection alone, water deprivation alone, or both treatments combined decreased the rma of the PD in Severe mice. Neither the supraoptic nuclei (SON) nor any of the other 19 brain areas studied were affected, in terms of rma, by either water deprivation, injection of dDAVP, or both.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of water deprivation and deamino [8-D-arginine] vasopressin on [14C]2-deoxyglucose uptake by the hypothalamo-hypophysial system in mice with hereditary nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. 402 54
In the first paper of this series, the influence of a single gene (di) for
vasopressin
deficiency on ethanol intake in rats was demonstrated. We studied preference for concentrations of ethanol between 2.2 and 10 percent versus tap water in Brattleboro rats homozygous for diabetes insipidus (di/di), heterozygous (di/+) or normal (+/+). The di/di rats, totally lacking in
vasopressin
, had greatly reduced preference scores for all concentrations of ethanol. Their intake of ethanol (g/day) was higher than heterozygotes or normals, but only when 2.2 percent ethanol was offered as a choice. Treatment with
vasopressin
or related peptides restored ethanol drinking to normal but also corrected water balance. In the experiments reported here, Roman High Avoidance (RHA) rats of three genotypes (+/+, di/+, and di/di) were also tested for ethanol intake and preference with similar but not identical results. Thus, the effects of the di gene are independent of the genetic background on which it is placed to at least some extent. Chlorothiazide, a drug unrelated to
vasopressin
, also normalized ethanol drinking and corrected water balance in di/di rats. In
nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
mice, there was a strong negative correlation between severity of polydipsia and preference for ethanol. Thus, no paradigm tested was effective in dissociating polydipsia from reduced ethanol preference and increased ethanol intake. While these results cannot exclude a possible regulatory role for endogenous
vasopressin
in ethanol preference drinking, they more strongly suggest that reduced preference for ethanol and increased ethanol intake are epiphenomena secondary to a polydipsic state.
...
PMID:Vasopressin and ethanol preference. II. Altered preference in two strains of diabetes insipidus rats and nephrogenic diabetes insipidus mice. 407 23
The mechanism of lithium-induced diabetes insipidus was investigated in 96 patients and in a rat model. Polydipsia was reported by 40% and polyuria (more than 3 liter/day) by 12% of patients receiving lithium. Maximum concentrating ability after dehydration and
vasopressin
was markedly impaired in 10 polyuric patients and was reduced in 7 of 10 nonpolyuric patients studied before and during lithium therapy. Severe polyuria (more than 6 liter/day) was unresponsive to trials of
vasopressin
and chlorpropamide, but improved on chlorothiazide. Rats receiving lithium (3-4 meq/kg/day) developed massive polyuria that was resistant to
vasopressin
, in comparison to rats with comparable polyuria induced by drinking glucose. Analysis of renal tissue in rats with lithium polyuria showed progressive increase in the concentration of lithium from cortex to papilla with a 2.9-fold corticopapillary gradient for lithium. The normal corticopapillary gradient for sodium was not reduced by lithium treatment. The polyuria was not interrupted by brief intravenous doses of
vasopressin
(5-10 mU/kg) or dibutyryl cyclic AMP (10-15 mg/kg) capable of reversing water diuresis in normal and hypothalamic diabetes insipidus rats (Brattleboro strain). The present studies suggest that
nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
is a common finding after lithium treatment and results in part from interference with the mediation of
vasopressin
at a step distal to the formation of 3',5' cyclic AMP.
...
PMID:On the mechanism of lithium-induced diabetes insipidus in man and the rat. 436 Aug 56
A radioimmunoassay has been developed that permits reliable measurements of plasma arginine vasopressin (AVP) at concentrations as low as 0.5 pg/ml in sample volumes of 1 ml or less. Nonhormonal immunoreactivity associated with the plasma proteins is eliminated by acetone precipitation before assay, leaving unaltered a component that is immunologically and chromatographically indistinguishable from standard AVP. Storage of plasma results in a decline in AVP concentration and, thus, must be carefully regulated. The plasma AVP values obtained by our method approximate the anticipated levels and vary in accordance with physiologic expections. In recumbent normal subjects, plasma AVP ranged from (mean +/-SD) 5.4+/-3.4 pg/ml after fluid deprivation to 1.4+/-0.8 pg/ml after water loading, and correlated significantly with both plasma osmolality (r=0.52; P<0.001) and urine osmolality (r=0.77; P<0.001). After fluid restriction, plasma AVP was uniformly normal relative to plasma osmolality in patients with
nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
and primary polydipsia but was distinctly subnormal in all patients with pituitary diabetes insipidus. The infusion of physiologic amounts of posterior pituitary extract caused a dose-related rise in plasma
vasopressin
that afterwards declined at the expected rate (t(1/2)=22.5+/-4 min). We conclude that, when used appropriately, our radioimmunoassay method provides a useful way of assessing AVP function in man.
...
PMID:Development and clinical application of a new method for the radioimmunoassay of arginine vasopressin in human plasma. 472 63
Severe hypernatremia and hyperosmolar dehydration developed in a patient with partial urinary tract obstruction. The urine was initially hypotonic, and there was no response to exogenous
vasopressin
. These abnormalities resolved with relief of the urinary tract obstruction and replacement of the water deficit. This case documents lower urinary tract obstruction as a cause of
nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
and severe hypernatremia and illustrates its reversible nature.
...
PMID:Severe hypernatremia complicating urinary tract obstruction. 618 76
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