Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (vasopressin)
23,126 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sixty-nine children younger than 13 years of age with urinary tract infection were evaluated to identify risk factors for treatable urologic problems; i.e. those requiring surgery or prolonged antibiotic prophylaxis. All children had a renal ultrasound, intravenous pyelogram and voiding cystogram performed 4 to 6 weeks after the infection. Eleven children with treatable problems were identified, 10 with vesicoureteral reflux and 1 with a ureterocele. For identification of treatable problems the predictive value of a positive test was: (1) fever, 10 of 24 (41.7%); (2) abnormal D-deaminoarginine vasopressin renal concentrating ability, 8 of 24 (33.3%); (3) serum C-reactive protein greater than or equal to 1.0, 8 of 25 (32.0%); (4) Elevated urine N-acetylglucosaminidase, 5 of 16 (31.2%); (5) erythrocyte sedimentation rate greater than or equal to 25, 6 of 21 (28.6%); and (6) age less than 5 years, 10 of 43 (23.3%). Absence of fever denotes a low risk (less than 3%) of finding a treatable problem. Afebrile girls older than 5 years of age can have radiologic evaluation deferred until infection recurs. The presence of fever indicates a high risk of treatable urologic problems (41.7%) and warrants complete radiologic evaluation with the first urinary infection.
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PMID:Identification of children requiring radiologic evaluation for urinary infection. 390 20

The authors discuss the results of a dynamic study of the characteristics of nonspecific immune responsiveness (properdin, total protein and globulin fractions in blood plasma, C-reactive protein, and immunoglobulins G, A, and M) as well as of the index of water metabolism of the brain matter--the antidiuretic hormone (ADH) in plasma, in 259 patients with the nosological forms of a mild craniocerebral injury 145 of whom had concussion of the brain and 105 had mild contusion of the brain. Congruence of the clinical manifestations of the injury and the level of plasma ADH was recorded. The participation of the factors of nonspecific immune responsiveness in the body compensatory posttraumatic reactions and the genesis of the clinical manifestations of a mild craniocerebral injury is emphasized.
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PMID:[Immunologic changes in the acute period of slight craniocerebral trauma]. 650 92

A 66-year-old man was admitted with destructive arthropathy, and calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate was demonstrated in the synovial fluid specimen. He was found to have a hyponatremia. The serum sodium concentration was 121 mmol/l, plasma arginine vasopressin (AVP) 6.6 pmol/l, and serum interleukin (IL)-6 96 pg/l. The clinical findings suggest the diagnosis of syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH). However, destructive arthropathy with increased values of C-reactive protein and IL-6 is the only background of SIADH in this patient. We suggest the possibility that IL-6 produced at inflammatory lesions may have stimulated an excessive release of AVP resulting in the hyponatremia and hypochloremia of SIADH.
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PMID:Hyponatremia in a patient with chronic inflammatory disease. 980 92

Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a proinflammatory cytokine that is normally tightly regulated and expressed at low levels, except during infection, trauma, or other stress. Among several factors that down-regulate IL-6 gene expression are estrogen and testosterone. After menopause or andropause, IL-6 levels are elevated, even in the absence of infection, trauma, or stress. IL-6 is a potent mediator of inflammatory processes, and it has been proposed that the age-associated increase in IL-6 accounts for certain of the phenotypic changes of advanced age, particularly those that resemble chronic inflammatory disease [decreased lean body mass, osteopenia, low-grade anemia, decreased serum albumin and cholesterol, and increased inflammatory proteins such as C-reactive protein (CRP) and serum amyloid A]. Furthermore, the age-associated rise in IL-6 has been linked to lymphoproliferative disorders, multiple myeloma, osteoporosis, and Alzheimer's disease. This overview discusses the data relating IL-6 to age-associated diseases and to frailty. Like the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone, it is possible that certain clinically important late-life changes are due to an inappropriate presence of IL-6.
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PMID:Age-associated increased interleukin-6 gene expression, late-life diseases, and frailty. 1077 63

In patients with community-acquired pneumonia, traditional criteria of infection based on clinical signs and symptoms, clinical scoring systems, and general inflammatory indicators (for example, leukocytosis, fever, C-reactive protein and blood cultures) are often of limited clinical value and remain an unreliable guide to etiology, optimal therapy and prognosis. Procalcitonin is superior to other commonly used markers in its specificity for bacterial infection (allowing alternative diagnoses to be excluded), as an indicator of disease severity and risk of death, and mainly as a guide to the necessity for antibiotic therapy. It can therefore be viewed as a diagnostic, prognostic, and perhaps even theragnostic test. It more closely matches the criteria for usefulness than other candidate biomarkers such as C-reactive protein, which is rather a nonspecific marker of acute phase inflammation, and proinflammatory cytokines such as plasma IL-6 levels that are highly variable, cumbersome to measure, and lack specificity for systemic infection. Elevated levels of pro-adrenomedullin, copeptin (which is produced in equimolar amounts to vasopressin), natriuretic peptides and cortisol are significantly related to mortality in community-acquired pneumonia, as are other prohormones such as pro-atrial natriuretic peptide, coagulation markers, and other combinations of inflammatory cytokine profiles. However, all biomarkers have weaknesses as well as strengths. None should be used on its own; and none is anything more than an aid in the exercise of clinical judgment based upon a synthesis of available clinical, physiologic and laboratory features in each patient.
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PMID:Clinical review: the role of biomarkers in the diagnosis and management of community-acquired pneumonia. 2023 71

This review aims to provide physicians with an overview of the potential of biomarkers to complement existing clinical severity scores and in conjunction with clinical parameters to improve the diagnosis, risk-stratification and management of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs). The usefulness of biomarkers for diagnosing LRTIs is still unclear. However, the specificity of pneumonia diagnosis is high when high sensitivity C-reactive protein (CRP) and procalcitonin (PCT) are used. PCT, CRP and particularly pro-atrial natriuretic peptide (MR-proANP), pro-vasopressin (CT-proAVP) and proadrenomedullin (proADM) levels can reliably predict LRTIs mortality. These markers do not significantly improve the severity scores predictive values, confirming that biomarkers are meant to complement, rather than supersede, clinician's judgment and validated severity scores. Biomarkers, and particularly PCT, are useful tools as antibiotic treatment duration indicators both in pneumonia and exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Even if more data are required to fully appreciate the role of biomarkers in LRTIs management, there is emerging evidence that biomarkers have the potential to improve the daily clinical management of LRTIs.
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PMID:Biomarkers in lower respiratory tract infections. 2043 79

Copeptin is cosynthesized with vasopressin, also known as anti-diuretic hormone, with similar plasma levels. In the past 2 years, copeptin has been studied as a diagnostic and prognostic marker in infections and other diseases. In patients with decompensated heart failure, copeptin was an accurate prognostic marker for mortality. Cardiovascular disease is a major contributor to the mortality and morbidity in chronic kidney disease. Creation of an arteriovenous fistula (AVF) might contribute to the development or worsening of congestive heart failure (CHF). The aim of the study was to assess associations between copeptin, New York Heart Association (NYHA) class, and the location of the AVF in hemodialysis (HD) patients. The cross-sectional study was performed on a cohort of 93 clinically stable HD patients. Patients with proximal AVF tend to be older, with decreased renal residual function and increased NYHA functional class. These patients were also highly anemic, had more acidosis, and had increased high-sensitivity C-reactive protein along with increased copeptin and NT-proBNP levels. These changes were also associated with significant changes in all intra-cardiac dimensions, including right ventricle, both atria, and intraventricular septum and increase in end-systolic and end-diastolic left ventricular intra-cardiac dimensions. In multiple logistic regression analysis, the only associate of copeptin was NYHA functional class. Copeptin level in HD patients depends on cardiac function and it might be involved in the pathophysiology of cardiovascular disease in these patients. Proximal AVF creation might contribute to the development or worsening of CHF in HD patients.
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PMID:Copeptin and its relation to arteriovenous fistula (AVF) type and NYHA class in hemodialysis patients. 2201 28

Copeptin, the surrogate marker of arginine vasopressin (AVP), has been suggested to be a useful biomarker in monitoring sepsis reflecting hemodynamic imbalance and stress state. This prospective study conducted at a hematology ward in a Finnish University Hospital aimed to investigate whether plasma copeptin predicts the development of complicated course of neutropenic fever (bacteremia or need for treatment at intensive care unit) in 100 hematological patients experiencing their first neutropenic fever episode after intensive chemotherapy for hematological malignancy. Contrary to study presumptions, not elevated copeptin but the lack of a proper initial increase of plasma copeptin (<0.02 ng/mL from day 0 to day 1) predicted blood culture positive sepsis (p=0.023) and gram-negative bacteremia (p=0.045). No correlation was observed with plasma sodium, blood pressure or evaluated osmolality. Plasma copeptin correlated inversely with the same day pentraxin 3 on day 0-day 2 (all p-values <0.001) and with C-reactive protein on day 1 (p=0.015). In conclusion, copeptin did not correlate with disease severity, but the lack of a proper initial increase was associated with bacteremic complications of febrile neutropenia in hematological patients. The findings suggest the possibility of central dysregulation of AVP release and do not support the use of copeptin as a biomarker of septic complications in this patient group.
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PMID:Plasma copeptin in the assessment of febrile neutropenia. 2258 Jan 73

Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is the leading cause of death from infectious diseases worldwide, with an incidence of 0.3 to 0.5% in the adult population. A new diagnostic and prognostic approach relies on evaluation of biomarkers as an expression of the host's inflammatory response against the microorganism. C-reactive protein (CRP), procalcitonin (PCT), and cytokines are the most frequently studied, whereas pro-adrenomedullin (pro-ADM), pro-vasopressin (pro-VNP), and others are currently obtaining promising results. Their usefulness for diagnosis is limited, although PCT has been successfully used to guide prescription of antibiotics in patients with suspected CAP. Nevertheless, the accuracy of PCT in distinguishing between bacterial or viral infection and safely withholding antibiotics in CAP is the subject of debate. Analysis of systemic biomarkers in addition to clinical scores [Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI) or CURB-65 (confusion, urea, respiratory, blood pressure, >65 years)/CRB-65 (confusion, respiratory, blood pressure)] has been shown to improve 30 day mortality prediction and absence of severe complications. Pro-ADM is probably the biomarker that correlates most strongly with mortality prediction. During treatment, ~15% of hospitalized CAP patients develop treatment failure, and almost 6% may manifest rapidly progressive pneumonia. Initially increased and persistent raised levels of biomarkers and cytokines have been shown to identify patients at risk of treatment failure, thereby aiding clinical management. Data from the literature appear to support the use of biomarkers in routine clinical practice to improve the decision making in CAP.
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PMID:Biomarkers and community-acquired pneumonia: tailoring management with biological data. 2271 12

Oxytocin (OT) is a neurohypophyseal peptide traditionally associated with female reproductive functioning, and more recently with prosocial behavior. OT and its receptor are also expressed in the heart and vascular tissue and play a role in cardiovascular homeostasis. In vitro, it has been demonstrated that OT decreases NADPH-dependent superoxide production and pro-inflammatory cytokine release from vascular endothelial cells and macrophages, suggesting that OT may attenuate pathophysiological processes involved with atherosclerotic lesion formation. The present study sought to determine the effect of chronic exogenous OT administration on inflammation and atherosclerosis in an animal model of dyslipidemia and atherosclerosis, the Watanabe Heritable Hyperlipidemic (WHHL) rabbit. Twenty-two, 3-month-old WHHLs were surgically implanted with osmotic mini-pumps containing OT (n=11) or vehicle (n=11), and then were individually housed for the entire study. Blood and 24-h urine samples were taken at baseline and after 8 (midpoint) and 16 (endpoint) weeks of treatment. At endpoint, the aortas and visceral fat samples were dissected and stored for analyses. There were no group differences in body weight, serum lipids, plasma/urinary measures of oxidative stress, plasma cortisol or urinary catecholamines over the 16-week treatment. OT-treated animals exhibited significantly lower plasma C-reactive protein levels at midpoint and endpoint and developed significantly less atherosclerosis in the thoracic aorta relative to vehicle control animals at endpoint (p<0.05). Cytokine gene expression from visceral adipose tissue samples suggested that there was a decrease in adipose tissue inflammation in the OT-treated group compared to the vehicle control group, however these differences were not statistically significant. These results suggest that chronic peripheral OT administration can inhibit inflammation and atherosclerotic lesion development.
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PMID:Oxytocin administration attenuates atherosclerosis and inflammation in Watanabe Heritable Hyperlipidemic rabbits. 2299 49


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