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)

dl-Propranolol (0.8-1.6 mg/kg - h for 1 h) produced a transient two- to three-fold increase in sodium excretion in nondiuretic rats infused with Pitressin and aldosterone and in water diuretic rats. Sodium excretion increased more in rats depleted of renin by chronic Doca and salt administration than in rats maintained on a low salt diet. An angiotensin inhibitor (1,sarcosine-8,valine angiotensin II) decreased sodium excretion. Therefore the natriuresis was not mediated by antidiuretic hormone, aldosterone, or renin-angiotensin. d-Propranolol did not produce a natriuresis. Prior treatment with phenoxybenzamine did not prevent the natriuretic response but chlorisondamine pretreatment did. The natriuresis is produced by beta blockade and requires post ganglionic nerve function but is independent of alpha receptors. dl-Propranolol decreased heart rate and cardiac output but systemic pressure did not fall and renal blood flow increased. This suggests a dopamine-mediated renal vasodilation and natriuresis. Haloperidol and pimozide, both dopamine blocking agents with minimal beta blocking effects, prevented the natriuretic response. We conclude that propranolol may increase sodium excretion directly by blocking beta receptors in the distal nephron and indirectly by dopamine-mediated renal vasodilation.
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PMID:Propranolol induces acute natriuresis by beta blockade and dopaminergic stimulation. 1 Oct 39

Because propranolol is contraindicated in some patients and since clonidine can decrease heart rate and renin release, clonidine was substituted for propranolol in 14 severely hypertensive minoxidil-treated outpatients. Clonidine induced weight loss which, since plasma concentrations were not suppressed, was not due to inhibition of release of antidiuretic hormone or renin. These endocrine interrelations were confirmed by later administration of clonidine to 4 of the subjects under controlled circumstances in our General Clinical Research Center. When substituted for propranolol, clonidine controlled blood pressure and heart rate in 8 of the 9 outpatients whose blood pressure had been previously well controlled. Clonidine and propranolol had additive antihypertensive effects in the other 5 patients. Thus, clonidine can substitute for propranolol or when added to the propranolol-vasodilator combination supply an additional blood pressure-lowering effects. This substitution or addition results in an increase in side effects. In addition, clonidine has a diuretic action under these circumstances by an unknown mechanism.
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PMID:Clonidine and the vasodilating beta blocker antihypertensive drug interaction. 1 12

Rats with unilateral nephrectomy were offered 1% sodium chloride as drinking fluid and were injected with desoxycorticosterone trimethylacetate (D.O.C.-T.M.A.) at weekly intervals. During the fourth to seventh week after the start of the experiment, malignant hypertension developed in most of the animals: body weight fell, reflecting volume depletion; serum osmolality and serum sodium and urea concentrations increased; in the kidneys malignant nephrosclerosis occurred. In such animals, plasma concentrations of arginine-vasopressin were increased ten-fold in comparison with control animals; intravenous injection of a specific vasopressin antibody resulted in a transient fall of blood-pressure (B.P.) to normal or subnormal levels, while the injection of an angiotensin-I or angiotensin-II antibody did not affect B.P. In control animals none of the antibodies had an effect on B.P. It is concluded that in the pathogenesis of malignant D.O.C. hypertension vasopressin plays a role similar to that of renin-angiotensin in malignant renal hypertension.
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PMID:Is vasopressin involved in the pathogenesis of malignant desoxycorticosterone hypertension in rats? 5 84

The concept of the "inappropriate" has a well-defined and easily comprehended meaning when applied to tumour secretion of antidiuretic hormone (A.D.H., vasopressin). When applied to high A.D.H. in other situations such as nephrotic syndrome, congestive cardiac failure, or cirrhosis, the use of the term "inappropriate secretion" simply reflects the fact that an easily measured controlling factor (plasma tonicity) is being overridden by a less easily measured one (effective extracellular volume). Similarly, sodium excretion in hypertension is said to be inappropriately low for the raised renal perfusion pressure: in this case inappropriateness results from the antinatriuretic effect of a minor degree of sodium depletion produced by pressure natriuresis. A similar objection can be made to the application of the term to the relations between renin or angiotensin-II concentrations and blood-pressure in some forms of hypertension. Since inappropriateness merely reflects the position and predilections of the observer, the widespread use of the term should be abandoned.
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PMID:On the inappropriate in hypertension research. 7 8

We investigated the role of arginine-vasopressin (AVP) in maintaining the blood pressure of spontaneously hypertensive (SH) rats (stroke-prone strain) with established hypertension (22--28 weeks of age). In comparison with normotensive Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats, plasma AVP concentrations of SH rats with benign hypertension (BH) were elevated twofold and in rats with severe or malignant hypertension (S-MH), fourfold. The height of the blood pressure was quantitatively related to plasma AVP in both BH and S-MH rats, the overall correlation coefficient being 0.66 (p less than 0.001). The intravenous injection of a specific AVP antiserum into conscious and unrestrained rats lowered blood pressure in 4 BH rats by 48 +/- 14 mm Hg and in 4 S-MH rats by 78 +/- 10 mm Hg and had only a marginal effect in 4 normotensive WKY rats. Infusion of saralasin did not lower blood pressure in WKY and BH rats and reduced blood pressure in only 2 of 7 S-MH rats tetsted (by 15 and 20 mm Hg). During AVP infusion the blood pressure of SH rats increased more (p less than 0.001) and heart rate fell much less (p less than 0.001) than in WKY rats. It is concluded that in SH rats with established hypertension, plasma AVP plays an important role in the maintenance of high blood pressure, while the renin-angiotensin system plays a minor or no role.
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PMID:Studies on the role of vasopressin in blood pressure control of spontaneously hypertensive rats with established hypertension (SHR, stroke-prone strain). 9 26

This study conducted on the crewmembers of Skylab 3 was designed to evaluate the endocrinological adaption resulting from extend exposure to a space flight environment by identifying changes in hormonal and associated fluid and electrolyte parameters. The three men served as their own controls and were on a constant dietary intake. Complete metabolic collections were performed beginning 21 d before the flight, continuing throughout the flight, for 18 d postflight. Changes in fluid and electrolyte balance have been correlated with weight loss, changes in the excretion of aldosterone, vasopressin, and fluid compartments. Inter-individual variability was demonstrated in most experimental indices measured; however, statistically significant patterns have emerged which include: decreases in body weight and ADH, increases in plasma renin activity, and elevations in urinary catecholamines, aldosterone and cortisol concentrations. Urinary sodium was increased in flight but potassium was only slightly changed. Total body exchangeable K was slightly decreased in all three of the crewmen. Total body water and extracellular fluid were decreased postflight in almost all cases. The measured changes are consistent with the prediction that a relative increase in thoracic blood volume upon transiton to the zero gravity environment is interpretated as a true volume expasion resulting in a net fluid loss. This, in association with other factors, ultimately results in a reduction in intravascular volume leading to an increase in renin and a secondary aldosteronism. Once these compensatory mechanisms are effective in reestablishing positive water balance, the crewemn are considered to be essentially adapted to the space environment. Although the physiological cost of this adaptation must reflect the electrolyte deficit and perhaps other factors, it is assumed that the compensated state is adequate for the demands of the environment; however, this new homeostatic set is not believed to be without physiological cost and could, except with proper precautions, reduce the functional reserve of exposed individuals.
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PMID:Metabolic and endocrine studies: the second manned Skylab mission. 17 19

A moderate elevation of the daily excretion of free noradrenaline and adrenalin is observed in chronic circulatory insufficiency, beginning with Stage IIA. The catecholamines metabolism is elevated, as shown by the daily excretion of normethanpherine and methanpherine and of vanillyl-mandelic acid. The activity of renin and angiotensinases was growing along with the progressing cardiac insufficiency. The blood level of angiotensinogen was decreasing, especially in patients with Stage IIB and III of decompensation. The daily excretion of aldosterone was growing along with the development of cardiac insufficiency. The functional state of the glucocorticoid function of the adrenal cortex was of a phased nature in cases of circulatory insufficiency. The study of the functional state of the epiphysis was conducted by way of determining the blood level of melatonine and of its daily excretion. In Stages I and IIA the level of this hormone was clearly elevated, in Stages IIB and III -- decreased as compared with the initial and normal levels. The plasma level of the antidiuretic hormone was distinctly growing, beginning with Stage IIB, reaching its maximal values in Stage III.
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PMID:[State of the neurohumoral regulatory system in circulatory insufficiency]. 18 17

One of several factors affecting the secretion of renin by the kidneys is the sympathetic nervous system. The sympathetic input is excitatory and is mediated by beta-adrenergic receptors, which are probably located on the membranes of the juxtaglomerular cells. Stimulation of sympathetic areas in the medulla, midbrain and hypothalamus raises blood pressure and increases renin secretion, whereas stimulation of other parts of the hypothalamus decreases blood pressure and renin output. The centrally active alpha-adrenergic agonist clonidine decreases renin secretion, lowers blood pressure, inhibits ACTH and vasopressin secretion, and increases growth hormone secretion in dogs. The effects on ACTH and growth hormone are abolished by administration of phenoxybenzamine into the third ventricle, whereas the effect on blood pressure is abolished by administration of phenoxybenzamine in the fourth ventricle without any effect on the ACTH and growth hormone responses. Fourth ventricular phenoxybenzamine decreases but does not abolish the inhibitory effect of clonidine on renin secretion. Circulating angiotensin II acts on the brain via the area postrema to raise blood pressure and via the subfornical organ to increase water intake. Its effect on vasopressin secretion is debated. The brain contains a renin-like enzyme, converting enzyme, renin substrate, and angiotensin. There is debate about the nature and physiological significance of the angiotensin II-generating enzyme in the brain, and about the nature of the angiotensin I and angiotensin II that have been reported to be present in the central nervous system. However, injection of angiotensin II into the cerebral ventricles produces drinking, increased secretion of vasopressin and ACTH, and increased blood pressure. The same responses are produced by intraventricular renin. Angiotensin II also facilitates sympathetic discharge in the periphery, and the possibility that it exerts a similar action on the adrenergic neurons in the brain merits investigation.
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PMID:The renin-angiotensin system and the central nervous system. 19 Dec 99

Angiotensin II is a peptide normally present in the bloodstream and central nervous system. Exogenous angiotensin induces drinking which is inhibited by saralasin, a specific receptor antagonist. Administration of saralasin does not reduce endogenously stimulated drinking. Angiotensin is dipsogenic after intravenous or intracerebroventricular infusion, raising the possibility of multiple access routes to the brain. Water deprived rats were given saralasin by both routes simultaneously to block the access of endogenous angiotensin to recentors reached from blood and ventricular cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Water deprivation increased plasma (Na+), hematocrit, vasopressin content and renin activity but saralasin treatment did not reduce water intake after 30 or 60 min. Therefore, blood or CSF-bore angiotensin does not appear to be an absolute requirement for water deprivation drinking behavior.
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PMID:Drinking behavior in water deprived rats after angiotensin receptor blockade. 19 67

Daily arginine-vasopressin (AVP) excretion was determined by radioimmunoassay in 60 consecutive cases of untreated lung carcinoma. Control excretion was 61 +/- 34 (SD) in 41 healthy subjects and 50 +/- 38 ng/24 h in 10 patients with chronic lung diseases. Overall 20 out of the 60 cases of lung carcinoma presented with abnormally elevated urinary AVP; In the group with anaplastic oat-cell carcinoma, 15 of 23 had elevated urinary AVP with a mean of 370 +/- 331 (SD) ng/24 h if 2 cases with extremely high values of 11 100 and 55 300 ng/24 h respectively are excluded. None of the 9 patients with large-cell carcinoma had elevated urinary AVP, while only 3 of the 19 cases of epidermoid carcinoma and 2 of the 9 cases of adenocarcinoma had high urinary AVP, with means of 127 +/- 8 and 125 +/- 12 ng/24 h respectively. Plasma osmolality and sodium correlated inversely with AVP excretion. However, only 10 of 23 patients with increased urinary AVP had decreased plasma sodium, although one became hyponatremic 9 weeks later. In one patient AVP excretion normalized after radiotherapy. Plasma renin activity and urinary aldosterone were usually low when urinary AVP was high. Two cases with elevated plasma luteotrophic hormone and another with elevated plasma ACTH, all three presenting with oat-cell carcinoma, were found;
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PMID:[Daily excretion of antidiuretic hormone in bronchial carcinoma]. 19 8


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