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)

A 52-year-old man, known to be alcohol dependent, was admitted to hospital because of intense drowsiness. He had previously drunk over 100 g alcohol daily, but for the last 2 days "not a drop". Serum sodium concentration was 103 mmol/l, serum osmolarity was low (216 mosmol/l) and urine osmolarity remarkably high (373 mosmol/l). These abnormalities, taken in conjunction with his normal water balance (absence of obvious edema or dehydration), suggested the diagnosis of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (ADH), and this was confirmed by a water loading test. Exclusion of the recognized causes of inappropriate ADH secretion left alcohol withdrawal as the only tenable explanation. The reabsorption of water which it induced was the cause of the patient's hyponatraemia and drowsiness. Restriction of fluid intake to 500 ml daily with continued total abstinence from alcohol led to rapid recovery. The discovery of hyponatraemia in an alcoholic in a state of normal water balance should rouse suspicion of inappropriate ADH secretion.
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PMID:[Inappropriate ADH secretion caused by alcohol withdrawal: a rare cause of hyponatremia]. 280 92

The influence of an increasing dose of the vasopressin-like peptide DGAVP (desglycinamide-arginine-vasopressin) on memory was investigated in two groups of ten healthy male volunteers to provide information about the hypothesis of improvement of memory by vasopressin. At the same time we evaluated the effect of DGAVP on mood, alertness or sleepiness in a double-blind placebo-control design. The treatment group received at 9.15 a.m. intranasally a daily increasing dose from 0.1 mg at day 1 to 10.0 mg at day 5. DGAVP did not significantly affect any measure of memory or alertness. DGAVP did, however, produce a significant increase in concentration level and mood. The results of the present study provide no support for the vasopressin theory of memory improvement; rather, the results direct the attention to attention modulating effects.
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PMID:Does DGAVP influence memory, attention and mood in young healthy men? 311 Aug 45

An 8-yr-old girl is presented who had periodic attacks of vomiting, psychotic depression, drowsiness, and hypertension (160/110 mm Hg) for a period of 16 months after head injury. At the initiation of the attack, serum ACTH and vasopressin levels were prominently increased (610 pg/ml and 41 microunits/ml, respectively), followed by hypercortisolemia, hyponatremia, and hypoosmolality in plasma. Serum PRL also was elevated (91 ng/ml). Responses of GH and cortisol to insulin-induced hypoglycemia and those of TSH to TRH were reduced. Urinary excretion of epinephrine and norepinephrine were increased, while dopamine (DA) excretion was reciprocally decreased, resulting in a marked elevation of the epinephrine plus norepinephrine to DA ratio during the episodes (0.4-4.5); this was normalized on attack-free days (0.08-0.25). During the attack, the concentration of homovanillic acid, a major metabolite of DA in the brain, also was reduced in cerebrospinal fluids from 70 to 23 ng/ml. The administration of methyl-dopa and reserpine effectively suppressed the recurrence of the episode. Although the exact cause of this syndrome is unknown, a periodic metabolic dysfunction of catecholamine in the central nervous system might be postulated.
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PMID:A syndrome of periodic adrenocorticotropin and vasopressin discharge. 627 29

This study investigated diurnal variations in the affective and endocrine response to opioid blockade in man and whether there were effects related either to the dose of naloxone or the time of day at which it was given. Normal male subjects were given an intravenous bolus of either 0.2 mg/kg (study 1) or 1 mg/kg naloxone (study 2) or control infusions at two time points (0900 or 1800 hours) in a single-blind crossover design. Before and following each infusion, mood was measured by the Profile of Mood States (POMS) and a visual analogue scale (VAS), and blood samples taken at 15-min intervals. Cortisol, LH ACTH and vasopressin (study 2 only) were measured. Blood pressure and heart rate were also monitored. The lower dose of naloxone had no effect on overall mood (POMS), though tension and confusion were increased in the afternoon. The VAS showed increased depression in the afternoon, and heightened tension, sleepiness and reduced ability to concentrate at both times of day. The higher dose increased overall dysphoria at both time points, though the tension and depression subscales were not altered. VAS depression and tension were increased, and there were changes in sleepiness. Subjective reports showed that 45% of the subjects correctly identified the drug treatment at the lower dose compared with 89% at the higher one. ACTH increased after both doses of naloxone irrespective of time of day. Cortisol was also raised by naloxone; the effect was greater in the afternoon for the lower dose, but not the higher.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effects of naloxone on diurnal rhythms in mood and endocrine function: a dose-response study in man. 785 19

In this prospective study, a series of 1812 consecutive mild head injured adult patients who visited the hospital emergency department were assessed. Twenty-eight patients (1.5%) deteriorated after head injury; 23 of these (1.3% of the series) required surgical intervention. Five patients (0.3%) deteriorated due to non-surgical causes [post-traumatic seizure 2, syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH) 3]. Most of the deterioration occurred within the first 24 hours (57%). Post-traumatic headache was found in 280 patients (15.5%) and 84 patients (4.6%) suffered post-traumatic vomiting. The relative risk is calculated. Age over 60, presence of drowsiness, focal motor weakness, post-traumatic headache and vomiting has increased risk of deterioration (p < 0.001). This study suggests that post-traumatic headache and vomiting deserve more clinical attention rather than being considered as post-traumatic syndrome only.
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PMID:Relative risk of deterioration after mild closed head injury. 874 3

We report a syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH), neurotoxicity and facial erythema induced by several anti-cancer drugs in a case of malignant lymphoma of thyroid gland. A 68-year-old male was admitted, complaining of neck tumor and dyspnea. On admission, he was treated with vincristine (VCR) for bronchostenosis due to malignant lymphoma. Neck tumor and mediastinal lymph node swelling reduced. On the ninth day after chemotherapy of VCR, a consciousness disturbance was found and he was diagnosed as having SIADH. Following chemotherapy of cyclophosphamide, SIADH was also induced so he was treated with irradiation for neck and mediastinal field, instead of chemotherapy. During irradiation, however, enlargement of systemic lymph nodes appeared, and the chemotherapy was resumed. He achieved partial remission, but somnolence after ifosfamide and facial erythema after ranimustine were observed. In spite of the difference in the chemical structure of these anti-cancer drugs, several side effects occurred. It is suggested that the direct effects of drugs on the nervous system were SIADH and neurotoxicity.
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PMID:[Syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone and neurotoxicity induced by vincristine and alkylating agents during chemotherapy for malignant lymphoma of thyroid gland]. 957 77

The syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH) is characterized by hyponatraemia due to water retention resulting from the persistent release of antidiuretic hormone (vasopressin). It may occur in a variety of malignant and non-malignant conditions, in particular in association with oat cell carcinoma, pulmonary and cerebral diseases. We report the case of a male patient affected by melanoma of the right temporal region with brain metastasis who developed acute headache, drowsiness, nausea, vomiting and pathological reflexes. Clinical and laboratory investigations led us to the diagnosis of SIADH. Restriction of fluid intake obtained a good clinical improvement with normalization of laboratory alterations; after 2 months the patient experienced a new episode of SIADH which was promptly treated. As melanoma has been occasionally observed in association with SIADH it should be included in the list of tumours that can cause this particular syndrome.
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PMID:Syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone in a patient affected by metastatic melanoma. 976 13

Insulin-induced hypoglycemia causes somnolence in rhesus monkeys, a phenomenon usually considered an aspecific consequence of neuroglycopenia. Previous observations from our laboratory have raised the possibility that arginine vasopressin (AVP) may also play a role in this decrease in wakefulness. In the present study we tested this hypothesis by inducing hypoglycemia (approximately 40 mg/dl) in ovariectomized rhesus monkeys by intravenous administration of insulin in the presence of continuous intracerebroventricular infusions of the V1 receptor antagonist [deamino-Pen1, O-Me-Tyr2,Arg8]-vasopressin (180 micrograms/60 microliters per h) or of its vehicle alone (artificial cerebrospinal fluid, 60 microliters/h). Wakefulness was assessed by a scoring system by observers blinded to the experimental protocol. The AVP antagonist significantly attenuated the decrease in wakefulness observed in response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia (p < .03) without increasing blood glucose levels. These and previous findings suggest that the somnolence induced by a moderate degree of hypoglycemia may not entirely be the direct consequence of neuroglycopenia and that AVP may, directly or indirectly, be involved.
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PMID:Mitigation of the somnolence of insulin-induced hypoglycemia by a vasopressin V1 receptor antagonist in the rhesus monkey. 980 24

Motion sickness provides a unique setting for the study of nausea. Studies of illusory self-motion have linked nausea and objective measures of gastric dysrhythmias and the stress hormones vasopressin and epinephrine. Electrogastrographic methods utilize Ag-AgCl electrodes placed on the abdominal surface in the epigastric region to record electrogastrograms (EGGs), a noninvasive measure of gastric myoelectrical activity. The EGG frequencies of interest are the normal range (2.4-3.6 cpm), tachygastrias (3.6-9.9 cpm), and bradygastrias (1.0-2.4 cpm), and duodenal respiratory frequencies (10.0-15.0 cpm). Illusory self-motion or vection is produced with a rotating drum. Minutes before vection-induced nausea is reported, the baseline EGG signal shifts into tachygastrias or mixed tachygastrias and bradygastrias. Quantitative analyses show that the percentage of power in the tachygastria range correlates with the intensity of nausea. Plasma vasopressin levels correlate positively with intensity of nausea. Asian subjects have higher intensity nausea and higher vasopressin levels compared with Caucasian subjects, indicating a potential genetic susceptibility to vection-induced motion sickness and nausea. Vection-induced motion sickness represents an experimental model of acute-onset nausea with accompanying symptoms such as headache, drowsiness, cold sweating, and fatigue. Illusory self-motion is a purely central nervous system (visual-vestibular) stimulation that evokes dramatic shifts in gastric electrical activity and significant release of the posterior pituitary hormone vasopressin. Central nervous systems pathways that evoke gastric dysrhythmias and release vasopressin may also have a pathophysiologic role in the cyclic vomiting syndrome.
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PMID:Illusory self-motion and motion sickness: a model for brain-gut interactions and nausea. 1049 40

A 73-year-old man with acute adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) in remission was re-admitted to our hospital due to drowsiness, headache, and bilateral knee joint pain on May 17, 1998. On admission, examinations revealed decreased serum sodium concentration (112 mEq/l), low plasma osmotic pressure (259 mOsm/l), and elevated antidiuretic hormone(5.6 pg/ml). Cerebrospinal fluid examination showed an increased number of abnormal flower-like lymphocyte (951/microliter). Brain computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging found no abnormality in the hypothalamus or pituitary gland. These findings yielded a diagnosis of syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH). Though ATL patients typically exhibit a variety of clinical symptoms, SIADH is rarely one of the complications. Further investigation showed that IL-1 beta and IL-6 concentrations were increased in spinal fluid but not in serum. Recently, it has been reported that exogeneous IL-6 is an inducer of ADH secretion, and that primary ATL cells and HTLV-I infected cell lines can produce IL-6. In this case, we speculated that IL-6 produced by ATL cells that infiltrated a cerebral lesion may have played an important role in the development of SIADH.
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PMID:[Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion associated with meningeal infiltration of tumor cells and elevated interleukin-1 beta and interleukin-6 in cerebrospinal fluid of a patient with adult T-cell leukemia]. 1072 44


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