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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fluid excess can cause hyporeninemia and hypoaldosteronemia in hemodialysis patients. In six patients on CAPD, plasma renin activity (PRA) and plasma aldosterone (PA) were elevated to levels of : PRA 10.2 +/- 2.9 nl (1-5 ng/ml/h), and PA: 47.4 +/- 16.2 (normal 5-20 ng/dl). In 4 patients, data posthemodialysis and later during CAPD revealed that PRA increased from 0.9 +/- 0.3 to 14.1 +/- 4.6 and PA increased from 3.4 +/- 0.3 to 67.4 +/- 24.9 on CAPD (p less than 0.05). Mean arterial pressure was lower on CAPD and serum glucose was higher. No significant difference was seen in weight, hematocrit, BUN, or potassium, however. Plasma volume was not decreased in five CAPD patients: 3619 +/- 358 ml (predicted 3083 +/- 201 ml). Elevated catecholamine levels were seen in CAPD patients: norepinephrine 868.0 +/- 104.1 (normal 358.4 +/- 41.5 pg/ml), epinephrine 386.3 +/- 49.2 (normal 58.3 +/- 10.6 pg/ml). Plasma
vasopressin
levels were elevated to the range usually seen with
hyperosmolality
. In eight patients who lost or gained weight on CAPD, levels of PRA and PA changed as expected, but catecholamine levels did not correlate with weight changes. The data suggest that in CAPD patients, PRA and PA may be elevated in association with augmented sympathetic stimulation and elevated
vasopressin
levels. Serial observations demonstrated that PRA and PA can respond appropriately to changes in body weight, while catecholamine and
vasopressin
levels seem to be influenced by other factors.
...
PMID:Increased levels of plasma renin, aldosterone, catecholamines and vasopressin in chronic ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) patients. 331 3
A sensitive and specific radioimmunoassay was used to measure plasma
antidiuretic hormone
(plasma arginine vasopressin, PAVP) concentrations in a conscious desert-adapted mammal, the banner-tailed kangaroo rat (Dipodomys spectabilis; 131 +/- 2.3 g body mass), during normal hydration and in response to progressive dehydration. Simultaneous measurements of PAVP and plasma osmolality (POSM) in these experiments permitted determination of the hypothalamo-
neurohypophyseal
system-osmoreceptor set point and sensitivity to extracellular
hyperosmolality
during dehydration. In normally hydrated kangaroo rats, acclimated to room temperature (20-24 degrees) and fed a dry grain diet, POSM and PAVP averaged 308.6 +/- 0.7 mosmol/kg H2O and 6.0 +/- 0.7 pg/ml (2.2 +/- 0.2 microU/ml), respectively (means +/- SE). In separate groups of animals subjected to 48, 96, 144, or 192 hr of dehydration, POSM and PAVP increased in a parallel linear manner with time to maxima of 329.7 +/- 2.4 mosmol/kg H2O and 68.8 +/- 4.4 pg/ml (24.9 +/- 1.6 microU/ml), respectively, at 192 hr of dehydration. Thus, a highly correlated and significant relationship between POSM and PAVP (r2 = 0.941, P less than 0.001) exists in dehydrated kangaroo rats, quantitatively defined by the linear regression equation PAVP (pg/ml) = 2.99 (POSM - 306.4), with an apparent osmotic threshold for AVP release at a POSM of 306.4 mosmol/kg H2O.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Regulation of plasma antidiuretic hormone in the dehydrated kangaroo rat (Dipodomys spectabilis M.). 336 Feb 85
A male, aged 16, with chronic hypernatremia, adipsia, polyphagia, and poikilothermia was studied regarding regulation and secretion of arginine vasopressin. During recumbency at night, low plasma arginine vasopressin levels and increased volumes of dilute urine were found; whereas plasma arginine vasopressin levels and urine osmolalities rose and urine volumes decreased during ambulation in the daytime. Neither a 25% reduction of mean arterial pressure nor hypertonic saline infusion increased plasma arginine vasopressin or urine osmolalities. Treatment with 1-desamino-D-
arginine-vasopressin
at 6 p.m. and a scheduled fluid intake according to actual body weight eradicated hypernatremia and
hyperosmolality
. These data demonstrate a complete loss of arginine vasopressin secretion to osmotic stimulation, a partial defect of arginine vasopressin secretion to non-osmotic stimulation, an abolished response to stimulation of high-pressure-baroreceptors, but an intact responsiveness to stimulation of low-pressure-baroreceptors.
...
PMID:Recumbent cranial diabetes insipidus. Studies in a patient with adipsia, hypernatremia, poikilothermia and polyphagia. 347 Oct 44
Subcutaneous injection of polyethylene glycol (PEG) solution in rats produces exponential increases in secretion of arginine vasopressin (AVP) and oxytocin (OT) in proportion to the induced plasma volume deficits. Previously, we reported that acute water loads eliminated the
neurohypophyseal
hormone responses to hypovolemia, whereas hypertonic NaCl potentiated them. The present experiments indicated that AVP and OT secretion after PEG treatment were blunted by prior maintenance of rats on a sodium-deficient diet for 2 days. In contrast, plasma AVP and OT levels after PEG treatment were enhanced by prior adrenalectomy or ligation of the inferior vena cava or by concurrent administration of phentolamine in association with arterial hypotension. AVP and OT responses to hypovolemia were similarly potentiated in rats made uremic by bilateral nephrectomy or by puncturing their bladders. These results parallel previous findings that osmotic dilution and sodium deprivation each enhance the sodium appetite induced by PEG treatment in rats, whereas
hyperosmolality
, hypotension, and uremia each abolish it. Consequently, they support our previous hypothesis that sodium appetite is inversely related to the activity of hypothalamic oxytocinergic neurons.
...
PMID:Neurohypophyseal secretion in hypovolemic rats: inverse relation to sodium appetite. 357 55
1. Intakes and urine outputs of fluid and electrolytes were measured before, during and after water deprivation in normal rats (Long-Evans strain) and in
vasopressin
-deficient rats (Brattleboro strain). 2. In a parallel experiment it was confirmed that the water-deprivation schedule used (Long-Evans rats 53 h, Brattleboro rats 14 h), and previously shown to cause similar percentage reductions in plasma volumes in the two strains, did produce more marked hypernatraemia and
hyperosmolality
and a greater percentage reduction in body weight in Brattleboro than in Long-Evans rats. 3. In Long-Evans rats, water deprivation caused a gradual reduction in urine output, a reduction in food intake and, during the first 24 h, increases in Na+ and K+ output. In Brattleboro rats, the reduction in urine output was more pronounced, but despite this total water losses were greater than from Long-Evans rats. Brattleboro rats showed a greater reduction in food intake. Their urinary Na+ and K+ losses were elevated during the first 9 h of water deprivation; thereafter these variables fell but remained above the level of intake. 4. The cumulative Na+ losses during water deprivation were similar in the two strains but the cumulative K+ losses in the Brattleboro rats were greater than in the Long-Evans rats. Thus the relative hypernatraemia and hyperkalaemia in water-deprived Brattleboro rats compared to water-deprived Long-Evans rats cannot be explained simply on the basis of differences in renal fluid and electrolyte handling. 5. There were significant increases in plasma angiotensin II and aldosterone levels at the end of the water deprivation periods in both strains of rat, and after the drinking water was returned there was a marked anti-natriuresis consistent with an expression of one of the renal actions of aldosterone.
...
PMID:Water deprivation: effects on fluid and electrolyte handling and plasma biochemistry in Long-Evans and Brattleboro rats. 365 63
Two infants developed evidence of
antidiuretic hormone
excess as a complication of infant botulism. Neither child received mechanical ventilatory support before the development of hyponatremia, serum hyposmolality, and urinary
hyperosmolality
. Both infants responded to fluid-intake restriction. The appearance of hyponatremia in an infant with botulism should suggest
antidiuretic hormone
excess. The recognition of this entity will lead to its appropriate management with fluid-intake restriction.
...
PMID:Antidiuretic hormone excess in infant botulism. 367 78
Patients with essential hypernatremia maintain urinary concentrating ability despite plasma
hyperosmolality
and low plasma
vasopressin
concentrations. We investigated renal sensitivity to ultralow dose
vasopressin
infusions in two patients with a syndrome of hypodipsia, hypernatremia with selective osmoreceptor dysfunction, early puberty, and aggressive behavior. The patients were water loaded until a hypotonic diuresis was established. Vasopressin was infused in stepwise increments from 0.4-12 fmol/kg X min. Both patients had increased renal sensitivity to
vasopressin
, achieving negative free water clearance at infusion rates of 0.4 and 4 fmol/kg X min (normal greater than or equal to 6). Treatment for 3 months with 1-desamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin (DDAVP) led to an improvement in behavior and the reporting, for the first time, of a sensation of thirst. After DDAVP therapy both patients had a reduction of their renal sensitivity to infused
vasopressin
. We conclude that untreated patients with essential hypernatremia have increased renal sensitivity to
vasopressin
which is reduced by DDAVP administration.
...
PMID:Increased renal sensitivity to vasopressin in two patients with essential hypernatremia. 378 33
Radioimmunoassay methods were employed to quantitatively characterize secretion of the avian
antidiuretic hormone
[arginine vasotocin (AVT)] by the hypothalamo-
neurohypophyseal
system (HNS) of the conscious domestic fowl in response to chronic dehydration. Water deprivation permitted characterization of AVT secretion in response to the combined stimuli of extracellular
hyperosmolality
and hypovolemia; the subsequent repletion of extracellular volume permitted separation of potential osmotic and volemic factors involved in the regulation of AVT secretion. In normally hydrated birds, plasma AVT (PAVT) and plasma osmolality (Posm) averaged 2.2 +/- 0.3 microU/ml (10.5 +/- 1.4 pg/ml) and 309.3 +/- 0.7 mosmol/kg H2O, respectively (means +/- SE). With water deprivation, PAVT and Posm of the birds increased in parallel in a curvilinear manner to maxima of 13.1 +/- 0.6 microU/ml (62.4 +/- 2.9 pg/ml) and 346.6 +/- 2.0 mosmol/kg H2O, respectively, at 96 h of dehydration. The isosmotic repletion of extracellular volume at 96 h by acute intravenous infusion failed to alter 96-h PAVT values. The results indicate that AVT secretion is closely linked to the state of hydration during negative fluid balance in the domestic fowl. Analysis of the data indicated that increases in PAVT that occur with dehydration are mediated primarily by extracellular
hyperosmolality
and that the HNS of the domestic fowl is relatively insensitive to the simultaneous hypovolemia incurred with fluid deprivation.
...
PMID:Regulation of plasma arginine vasotocin in conscious water-deprived domestic fowl. 396 34
We describe a 24-year-old short, obese girl who has bizarre episodic neurological abnormalities related to
hyperosmolality
due to hypernatraemia. Investigation of osmoregulation by water loading and infusion of hypertonic saline revealed (i) hypodipsia with thirst onset raised to plasma osmolality of 332 mmol/kg and (ii) elevation of the threshold for
vasopressin
release (plasma osmolality 320 mmol/kg) but normal slope of the plasma
vasopressin
-plasma osmolality curve. Baroregulated
vasopressin
release was also grossly subnormal. Other hypothalamo-pituitary investigations showed deficiencies of releasing hormones for gonadotrophins and growth hormone, but prolactin response to combined hypoglycaemia and TRH was blunted She demonstrated other anomalies including hyperlipoproteinaemia and defective lymph drainage of the legs. Skull X-rays, together with computerized tomography and nuclear magnetic resonance scans of the hypothalamo-pituitary region and the rest of the brain were normal. We believe that this is the first case of essential hypernatraemia documented with direct evidence of resetting of the osmostat.
...
PMID:A case of 'essential' hypernatraemia due to resetting of the osmostat. 398 72
The anteroventral third ventricle (AV3V) region plays an important role in fluid and electrolyte balance and cardiovascular control in the rat; however, experiments in other species have raised questions about the universality of findings in the rat. The effects of discrete lesions placed within the AV3V area on hydromineral balance, the pressor response to angiotensin II given intravenously, and the initiation of a renin-dependent model of hypertension were examined in the dog. A transpharyngeal approach to the optic chiasm enabled us to destroy only the anterior aspects of the AV3V region (aAV3V group) or to include the entire nucleus medianus (NM) as well (aAV3V + NM group). Lesions of the aAV3V caused polydipsia and transient hypernatremia and
hyperosmolality
. In contrast, adipsia and a sustained increase in plasma sodium levels and osmolality were observed in dogs with lesions of the aAV3V plus the entire NM. Neither lesion altered baseline arterial pressure, heart rate, plasma levels of catecholamines and
vasopressin
, or total plasma protein levels. Only in aAV3V + NM lesioned dogs was there a tendency for plasma angiotensin II immunoreactivity to be elevated above control values at 2 and 4 days after operation. Neither lesion attenuated the pressor response to intravenous angiotension II or the initiation of renal hypertension induced by aortic coarctation. As observed in other species, structures within the AV3V region participate in hydromineral balance in the dog; however, in the dog portions of the NM dorsal to the AV3V region are essential for the mediation of drinking behavior.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The anteroventral third ventricle region. Participation in the regulation of blood pressure in conscious dogs. 399 35
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