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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The posterior pituitary response to immobilization was studied in male and female rats. Plasma levels of arginine vasopressin (AVP) and oxytocin (OT) were measured both in control rats and in rats immobilized in an acrylic restrainer for 1 min. In male rats immobilization did not result in any change in AVP (control: 1.3 +/- 0.2 pmol/liter, mean +/-
SEM
; immobilized: 2.3 +/- 0.6 pmol/liter), although there was a small but significant increase in OT (control; 4.1 +/- 0.5 pmol/liter; immobilized: 10.2 +/- 2.2 pmol/liter; P less than 0.005). In female rats a marked rise was observed in AVP (control: 1.4 +/- 0.3 pmol/liter; immobilized: 5.5 +/- 1.3 pmol/liter; P less than 0.005), and the rise in OT was considerably greater (P less than 0.01) than that found in males (control: 4.7 +/- 0.8 pmol/liter; immobilized: 26.0 +/- 5.6 pmol/liter; P less than 0.001). Further groups of male and female rats were gonadectomized 2 weeks before immobilization. Basal levels of AVP and OT were unchanged. Orchidectomized males had an increased OT response to immobilization compared with sham-operated males (P less than 0.05) whereas the AVP response was not significantly changed. Ovariectomy did not significantly affect either the AVP or OT responses. Although the neural pathways responsible for the
neurohypophyseal
response to immobilization are not known, this data demonstrate that the response is dependent on the sex of the rat.
...
PMID:Sexual dimorphism in the posterior pituitary response to stress in the rat. 396 25
Hypouricemia seen with hyponatremia related to the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
(SIADH) results from an increase in uric acid renal clearance. We studied the mechanism of the increase of uric acid excretion in 6 SIADH patients through pyrazinamide (PZA), which decreases tubular secretion of uric acid, and sulfinpyrazone (SPZ) which decreases post-secretory reabsorption of uric acid. 3 g of PZA decreased the absolute uric acid excretion from 428 +/- 244 to 105 +/- 47 micrograms/min (mean +/- SD, p less than 0.01), and 300 mg of SPZ increased the uric acid to creatinine clearance ratio from 0.31 +/- 0.05 to 0.52 +/- 0.05 mg/dl glomerular filtration rate (mean +/-
SEM
, p less than 0.001), which represent an increment about half of that observed in the control group. The increase of uric acid clearance in SIADH seems to result from a decrease in the post-secretory reabsorption of uric acid. After SPZ, we saw a decrease of natriuresis from 5.6 +/- 1.4 to 1.8 +/- 0.3 mmol/h (p less than 0.001), without any change of urinary flow or urinary potassium excretion.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of hypouricemia in the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone. 397 80
The response of plasma and ventricular cerebrospinal fluid
vasopressin
concentration to short-time induced intracranial hypertension was studied in 8 patients with hydrocephalus, defined as ventricular enlargement on computerized tomography. In connection with measurement of conductance to cerebrospinal fluid outflow, the concentration of
vasopressin
in plasma and cerebrospinal fluid was measured during perfusion at a low (less than 10 mmHg) and at a high (greater than 20 mmHg) intraventricular pressure level. Mean plasma
vasopressin
concentration was increased from 2.4 +/- 0.4 pg/ml (
SEM
) during perfusion at the low pressure level to 4.2 +/- 0.8 pg/ml (p less than 0.01) at the high pressure level. The cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of
vasopressin
at the low and high intraventricular pressure were 1.2 +/- 0.1 pg/ml and 1.7 +/- 0.2 pg/ml (p less than 0.05), respectively. However, only half of the patients responded to the increase in intraventricular pressure with an increase in cerebrospinal fluid
vasopressin
concentration exceeding 50%. The results of the present study suggest that an increase in the intracranial pressure might be a stimulus for
vasopressin
release in both the blood and the cerebrospinal fluid.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid and plasma vasopressin during short-time induced intracranial hypertension. 403 77
To eliminate the influence of anesthesia while investigating the role of vasoactive hormones during shock, we have developed an unanesthetized rat model that provides information on key cardiovascular parameters pertinent to shock. Enfluane anesthesia was used while the animals were being catheterized. After recovery from anesthesia, endotoxin (40 mg/kg) was given, and after 4 hr of measurements, animals (11) were killed. Cardiac index (CI) fell significantly 5 min after endotoxin and remained depressed for 4 hr. Mean blood pressure (MBP) decreased from 121 +/- 5.7 mmHg to 79 +/- 5.6 at 5 and 15 min, and increased to 113 +/- 3.0 at 180 min. Central venous pressure (CVP) was decreased from 30 min to the end of the study. Heart rate (HR) increased from 357 +/- 13 to a high of 448 +/- 14 at 5 min and remained at well over 400 for the 4-hr monitoring period. Total peripheral vascular resistance (TPVR) was twice that of the control at 30 min and remained elevated. Stroke volume decreased to 37% of that of the control at 15 and 30 min and remained at 50% of that of the control until sacrifice. Plasma concentrations of
vasopressin
measured by radioimmunoassay increased from 14 pg/ml (+/- 2.2,
SEM
) to 144 (+/- 56) and 144 (+/- 66) at 15 and 240 min after endotoxin. Pathological examination at the end of the study revealed extensive hemorrhage in all areas of the small intestine. We conclude that in the conscious endotoxic rat decreases in CI, MBP, and CVP are accompanied by compensatory increases in HR and TPVR; plasma
vasopressin
concentrations are greatly elevated; and severe small intestinal hemorrhage occurs. The control animals (12) were stable throughout the entire study period, establishing the conscious, instrumented, unrestrained rat presented here as an attractive model for the study of shock without the bias of anesthesia.
...
PMID:Evaluation of cardiac output, total peripheral vascular resistance, and plasma concentrations of vasopressin in the conscious, unrestrained rat during endotoxemia. 409 42
A simple, rapid and sensitive radioimmunoassay for plasma
arginine-vasopressin
(
AVP
) has been developed for routine use.
AVP
is first extracted from plasma with use of an octadecasilyl silica cartridge. The mean (+/-
SEM
) recovery is 73.1 +/- 2.1% (n = 24). The antibody and the 125I-
AVP
are both obtained from commercial sources. Following a 48 h incubation time, bound and free fractions of
AVP
are separated by dextran-charcoal. The reproducibility of the method is acceptable (between- and within-assay CV of 9.5 and 7.6%). This technique allows the detection of 0.39 pg/tube of
AVP
. This assay is applicable to determination of human plasma
AVP
levels; mean (+/-
SEM
) plasma
AVP
levels in normal human subjects in standing or sitting positions, or after an oral water load, were respectively 5.2 +/- 0.7, 3.6 +/- 0.4 and 2.7 +/- 0.4 pg/mL. This method has also been validated by determinations of plasma
AVP
levels in rabbits and hamsters in various conditions. The commercial availability of the antibody and radioactive
AVP
, and the simplicity of the method, make this technique suitable for clinical and research purposes.
...
PMID:Simple and rapid radioimmunoassay for the routine determination of vasopressin in plasma. 409 53
Neurophysins are "carrier proteins" associated with
vasopressin
and oxytocin in the
neurohypophyseal
system. The release of these hormone associated proteins may serve as an indicator of posterior pituitary function. This report describes the measurement of neurophysin in human and monkey plasma and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) by radioimmunoassay. Tissue neurophysin is also localized in monkey brain by the immunoperoxidase technique. CSF from 68 patients and five monkeys had easily measurable neurophysin in every sample. The concentration of neurophysin in CSF and in plasma of man is 5.4+/-0.30 ng/ml (mean and
SEM
) and 0.69+/-0.04, respectively. The two means were significantly different (P < 0.001). In paired plasma and CSF specimens which were obtained simultaneously from each of 13 human and five monkey donors, the concentrations of neurophysin in CSF were greater than those of plasma in every case (paired t test, P < 0.001). Neurophysin administered intravenously to dogs did not enter CSF. Using the immunoperoxidase technique, we found neurophysin not only in the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei, their tracts, and the posterior pituitary, but also in the specialized ependymal tanycytes of the infundibular recess of the third ventricle and in the external layer of the median eminence where capillaries drain into hypophyseal portal vessels. Neurophysin may pass from CSF to portal vessels via tanycytes in a manner similar to that postulated for releasing factors.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid and ependymal neurophysin. 463 77
The present experiments were designed to evaluate the effects of varying the osmolality of luminal solutions on the
antidiuretic hormone
(
ADH
)-independent water and solute permeability properties of isolated rabbit cortical collecting tubules. In the absence of
ADH
, the osmotic water permeability coefficient (cm s(-1)) P(f) (l-->b), computed from volume flows from hypotonic lumen to isotonic bath, was 20 +/- 4 x 10(-4) (
SEM
); the value of P(f) (b-->l) in the absence of
ADH
, computed from volume flows from isotonic bath to hypertonic lumen, was 88 +/- 15 x 10(-4) cm s(-1). We also measured apparent urea permeability coefficients (cm s(-1)) from (14)C-urea fluxes from lumen to bath (P(DDurea) (l-->b)) and from bath to lumen (P(DDurea) (b-->l)). For hypotonic luminal solutions and isotonic bathing solutions, P(DDurea) (l-->b) was 0.045 +/- 0.004 x 10(-4) and was unaffected by
ADH
. The
ADH
-independent values of P(DDurea) (l-->b) and P(urea) (b-->l) were, respectively, 0.216 +/- 0.022 x 10(-4) cm s(-1) and 0.033 +/- 0.002 x 10(-4) cm s(-1) for isotonic bathing solutions and luminal solutions made hypertonic with urea, i.e., there was an absolute increase in urea permeability and asymmetry of urea fluxes. Significantly, P(DDurea) (l-->b) did not rise when luminal hypertonicity was produced by sucrose; and, bathing fluid hypertonicity did not alter tubular permeability to water or to urea. We interpret these data to indicate that luminal hypertonicity increased the leakiness of tight junctions to water and urea but not sucrose. Since the value of P(f) (b-->l) in the absence of
ADH
, when tight junctions were open to urea, was approximately half of the value of P(f) (l-->b) in the presence of
ADH
, when tight junctions were closed to urea, we conclude that tight junctions are negligible paracellular shunts for lumen to bath osmosis with
ADH
. These findings, together with those in the preceding paper, are discussed in terms of a solubility-diffusion model for water permeation in which
ADH
increases water solubility in luminal plasma membranes.
...
PMID:Osmosis in cortical collecting tubules. ADH-independent osmotic flow rectification. 484 68
The response of trained, conscious dogs to an acute water load was studied before adrenalectomy and under five conditions of hormonal replacement and sodium intake after adrenalectomy. Before adrenalectomy, with the dogs drinking isotonic saline, the minimal urinary osmolality (Uosm) was 47+/-7 (
SEM
) mOsm and free-water clearance (C(H2O)) was 8.6+/-1 ml/min. These values were not different after adrenalectomy with or without deoxycorticosterone (DOCA) if the animals continued to drink saline and receive dexamethasone. Moreover, after adrenalectomy in the presence of saline drinking both dexamethasone and DOCA could be withdrawn for up to 4 days without impairment of diluting ability (Uosm, 54+/-7 mOsm and C(H2O), 7.3+/-1 ml/min). In contrast, when the dogs drank tap water (Na intake 30 mEq/day), water loading in the absence of dexamethasone and DOCA was associated with a significantly higher Uosm (127+/-28 mOsm) and lower C(H2O) (2.7+/-0.3 ml/min). Replacing DOCA alone in the presence of this limited Na intake returned diluting ability to normal (Uosm 31+/-7 mOsm, C(H2O) 7.7+/-0.5 ml/min). Glomerular filtration rate for each animal was the same under each condition except for a significant diminution which occurred when dexamethasone and DOCA were withdrawn while the animals were on a 30 mEq sodium intake. In contrast to previous conclusions, the present results indicate that in the absence of adrenal hormones normal renal diluting ability may occur, indicating both maximal suppression of
vasopressin
release and maximal distal tubular impermeability to water. In the present study the diluting defect observed after adrenalectomy related to negative sodium balance and could be overcome by either replacement with DOCA or a high intake of sodium alone.
...
PMID:Importance of sodium intake and mineralocorticoid hormone in the impaired water excretion in adrenal insufficiency. 503 19
The first half of this manuscript is devoted to a review of the methods used and the results obtained in the published measurements of the normal responses to tests of the three main types of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) activity in man. These are, I, basal, unstressed activity leading to appropriate levels of total daily production of cortisol in the characteristic circadian pattern; II, responses to feedback stimulation of HPA activity by metyrapone administration; and III, responses to tests of the effects of stress on the HPA system including the effects of hypoglycemia, induced fever,
vasopressin
administration, and ACTH injections and infusions. The advantages and shortcomings of each type of procedure are discussed. The second half of this paper describes the authors' attempts to establish the limits of normality of standard and modified methods of evaluating the HPA system. The defined limits of normality have been used to assess the HPA function in 158 patients with known or suspected disorders of the HPA system. In normal controls, halfhourly plasma cortisol determinations established the normality of circadian and postprandial fluctuations and of mean plasma cortisol concentration, 6.2 +/- 0.3 (
SEM
) micrograms/dl, which were closely approximated by determinations every 6 h. Metyrapone, given in a dose of 500 mg every 2 h for 24 h increased urinary 17-OHCS excretion to 10.5-32.6 mg/day or to 1.7-7.8 times basal excretion rate. Increasing rates of insulin infusion disclosed significant relationships between resulting plasma glucose and cortisol concentrations. The slopes of the delta cortisol/delta glucose responses were similar after insulin infusions (0.46 +/- 0.05) and after insulin injections, 0.15 U/kg (0.43 +/- 0.09), and were always greater than 0.20 micrograms/mg. This index provides a useful objective measure of the normality of responses to hypoglycemic stress, 0.20-0.87 micrograms/mg. Adrenocortical responses to iv infusions of ACTH (cosyntropin 0.25 mg) may be equivocal at 2 h but are clear cut at 4, 6 and 8 h. Of 158 patients in whom hypopituitarism was known or suspected because of the presence of a pituitary tumor, acromegaly, hyperprolactinemia, or clinical features, HPA function was found to be entirely normal in 88 patients and partially or severely abnormal in the remaining 70 patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Normal and abnormal function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical system in man. 608 18
The spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) and the stroke-prone substrain (sp-SHR) have been reported to have several abnormalities in levels of peptides both in tissue and in plasma (beta-endorphin, prolactin, thyroid stimulating hormone and
vasopressin
) when compared to the Wistar Kyoto (WKY) normotensive control rat. As the secretion of these peptides is under dopaminergic control and the abnormalities consistently suggest under-activity of the dopaminergic control system in the brain, injections of dopamine (0.4 mg/kg) were given i.c.v. to 10 SHR, 10 renal artery stenosis hypertensive rats (LRAS) and 10 genetically hypertensive rats of the New Zealand strain (GHR). Mean blood pressure fell from 205 +/- 6 (
SEM
) mmHg to 128 +/- 8 mmHg in the SHR (p less than 0.001), from 184 +/- 7 mmHg to 176 +/- 7 mmHg in the LRAS (p greater 0.05) and from 157 +/- 5 mmHg to 138 +/- 6 mmHg in he GHR (p less than 0.02). These effects were unlikely to be due to leakage of dopamine out into the periphery as i.v. dopamine (0.4 mg/kg) increased blood pressure in these animals.
...
PMID:Neuropeptide abnormalities suggest a dopaminergic basis for high blood pressure in the spontaneously hypertensive rat. 609 77
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