Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
30 patients on long-term lithium therapy have been studied. The results are presented of the urinary concentrating ability after water deprivation and the intranasal administration of
vasopressin
, of the simultaneous determination of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and effective renal plasma flow (ERPF), of the minimal urine pH after an oral dose of ammonium chloride, and of the urinary beta-2-microglobulin excretion. Mean urine concentration (+/- SEM) after 22 hr water deprivation (= Uosm) amounted to 854 +/- 22 mOsm/kg H2O, mean GFR was 101 +/- 4 ml/min, mean ERPF 360 +/- 18 ml/min, and mean minimal urine pH 4.95 +/- 0.06. In 8 out of 30 patients there was
polyuria
. In these 8 patients the values were 778 +/- 51 mOsm/kg H2O, 113 +/- 6 ml/min, 415 +/- 33 ml/min and 4.99 +/- 0.08, respectively. Serum levels of beta-2-microglobulin and lysozyme and the urinary excretion of beta-2-microglobulin were normal in all patients. No correlation was established between Uosm and the serum lithium concentration during the test (0.8 +/- 0.05 mmoles/l) nor between Uosm and the average serum lithium level during treatment (0.79 +/- 0.03). GFR was only correlated with age. It was found that administration of indomethacin during the concentration test increased Uosm in these patients. The results suggest that, given proper dosage and surveillance, long-term treatment with lithium is not likely to cause disturbances in renal function.
...
PMID:A renal function study in 30 patients on long-term lithium therapy. 4 7
Concentrations of the
antidiuretic hormone
, arginine vasopressin, were measured in 28 patients with severe hyperglycemia to determine if abnormalities in hormonal regulation of water excretion could contribute to the extreme dehydration of uncontrolled diabetes mellitus. Vasopressin levels were markedly elevated in both nonketotic and ketotic patients, indicating that
vasopressin
deficiency plays no role in the
polyuria
that accompanies hyperglycemia. Instead, the observed increases in
vasopressin
represent an ineffective effort to conserve water in the face of an overwhelming solute diuresis caused by the glucosuria. The reasons for such marked elevations in plasma
vasopressin
in these diabetic patients are multifactorial. Both groups of diabetic patients had evidence of hypovolemia, which was sufficient in magnitude to stimulate
vasopressin
release. Furthermore, nausea provided an independent stimulus to
vasopressin
secretion in many patients. Osmotic stimulation might have resulted from the large fraction of unidentified plasma solutes, but this factor alone was not sufficient to explain the markedly increased concentrations of
vasopressin
. Whether such elevations in
vasopressin
could have metabolic and/or hemodynamic effects in uncrontrolled diabetes remains to be established.
...
PMID:Plasma vasopressin in uncontrolled diabetes mellitus. 10 67
The
polyuria
and hyposthenuria noted particularly following blood transfusion after prolonged periods of hypotension (dog, monkey) seem best explained by a prostaglandin-
antidiuretic hormone
(PG-ADH) antagonism, operating primarily in the renal medulla. The kidney releases greatly enhanced amounts of PGE at this time, which probably act primarily in the renal medulla, then secondarily influence the systemic (arterial) levels by passing in greater amounts through the lungs. The lungs normally metabolize the major portion of PGs delivered to them. Our data suggest impairment of the lung's "up-take-metabolizing" mechanism, but also could be interpreted as involving enhanced release of PGE from the lung, so net pulmonary extraction, (V--A)/V, shifts from positive to zero or even negative values in the hypotensive shock phase. This ratio tends to improve after transfusion, but systemic PGE levels remain elevated. It is speculated that in hemorrhagic shock enhanced concentration of PGE and other vasodilator PGs, produced in increased amounts by the kidney (and possibly other organs and tissues), appear in greater amounts in the systemic plasma because of the lung's altered function. These exert a decompensatory action on the peripheral vasculature.
...
PMID:Role of the kidney and lung in the handling of prostaglandin E in hemorrhagic shock. 12 27
Lithium intoxication was induced in rats by intraperitoneal administration of lithium chloride in a daily dose of 200 mg/kg (0.22 LD50) for 6 days.
Polyuria
connected with pathological changes in the epithelium of the convoluted tubules and depression of the
antidiuretic hormone
--acid mucopolysaccharides system in the area of the straight kidney tubules was observed on the 6th day of the experiments. Oligouria and death of some of the animals on the 7th experimental day was caused by severe lesions the kidney structure. Further observation (30 days) demonstrated that, along with the regeneration processes, there developed a marked sclerosing ofthe kidney tissue. A conclusion was drawn that severe lithium intoxication was associated with the development of acute renal insufficiency. Functional reserves of the kidneys after the cessation of lithium chloride administration remained lowered for a long period.
...
PMID:[Role of the kidneys in the pathogenesis of lithium poisoning]. 13 80
The antidiuretic and urinary cyclic AMP response to supramaximal
vasopressin
infusion was studied in normal rats and in rats with lithium-
polyuria
. The animals were anaesthetized and then infused with a solution designed to produce excessive water diuresis and to lower basal cyclic AMP excretion. In 6 control animals not infused with
vasopressin
(1) urinary cyclic AMP excretion decreased during the infusion period. Vasopressin infusion (300 muU/min.) consistantly induced antidiuresis in all of 13 control rats (II); but the urinary cyclic AMP response varied individually from a significant increase in 6 animals to either no change or to a decrease in the remaining animals. The antidiuretic response to
vasopressin
was inhibited by 85% in 10 animals with marked
polyuria
induced by lithium administration (III). None of the animals in this group showed a significant increase of cyclic AMP excretion in response to
vasopressin
. The average rate of cyclic AMP excretion, which was equal in the two groups before
vasopressin
, was signifimantly lower in group III than in group II during
vasopressin
infusion. It is suggested that the increase in cyclic AMP excretion during
vasopressin
antidiuresis, although not consistant, most likely reflects hormone-induced changes of intracellular cyclic AMP levels in the renal medulla. Thus, the data suggest that the nephrogenic diabetes insipidus syndrome produced by lithium is associated with a defect in the renal formation of cyclic AMP in response to
vasopressin
.
...
PMID:Antidiuretic and urinary cyclic AMP response of vasopressin in normal rats and in rats with lithium-polyuria. 19 Aug 61
A 16-month-old black male infant had unusual thirst,
polyuria
, hyponatremia, and hypertension. His
polyuria
was unresponsive to
vasopressin
therapy, and his high blood pressure was not effectively controlled by antihypertensive drugs. Radiographic examinations revealed an occult Wilms tumor in the right kidney. After removal of the tumor, the signs and symptoms were relieved. The tumor had a renin activity about 280 times that of the adjacent renal cortex, and many intracytoplasmic secretory granules were found on electron microscopy. The pathogenesis of these clinical manifestations appears to be mediated through the physiologic pathways of renin-angiotensin II and renin-aldosterone.
...
PMID:Polydipsia, polyuria, and hypertension associated with renin-secreting Wilms tumor. 20 43
A 6-week-old girl with fever, hypernatraemia, dehydration, and
polyuria
failed to concentrate urine in response to exogenous
vasopressin
administration. There was no family history of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. When she was 15 months old, the infusion of
vasopressin
did not produce an increase in urinary cyclic-AMP.
...
PMID:Congenital nephrogenic diabetes insipidus in a baby girl. 21 90
Plasma
vasopressin
as well as plasma and urinary osmolality are measured during an overnight dehydration test in
vasopressin
is undetectable. It is present in plasma from patients with partial diabetes insipidus but the level is not appropriate for plasma osmolality. In patients with
polyuria
of renal origin plasma
vasopressin
was significantly higher than in patients with neurogenic diabetes insipidus. Plasma
vasopressin
measurement is of diagnostic values in partial neurogenic diabetes insipidus and may be of considerable help to distinguish this group of patients from children with
polyuria
of renal origin.
...
PMID:Diabetes insipidus in children. I. Arginine-vasopressin determination in plasma during short dehydration test. 29 68
Angiotensin II is dipsogenic, and
vasopressin
(ADH) regulates renal water excretion. Together, these hormones govern overall mammalian water balance. The Brattleboro rat with inherited diabetes insipidus (DI) lacks ADH and is therefore a convenient model with which to elucidate mechanisms regulating water metabolism. In the present studies, angiotensin II has also been removed from DI rats by the administration of an inhibitor (captopril, SQ 14225; D-2-methyl-3-mercaptopropanoyl-L-proline) of the enzyme which converts angiotensin I, the relatively inert component of the renin-angiotensin system, to angiotensin II, the biologically active substance. SQ 14225 reduced the drinking rates, and after 6 days lowered peripheral plasma aldosterone concentrations were associated with hyperkalaemia. We conclude that the polydipsia of diabetes insipidus partly results from elevated plasma renin activities and angiotensin II concentrations seen in this syndrome. Further, the apparent hypoaldosteronism of DI Brattleboro rats reflects differences in both tissue usage of the steroid and adrenocortical sensitivities associated with
polyuria
, hyperosmolarity and possibly potassium wasting.
...
PMID:Captopril (SQ 14225) depresses drinking and aldosterone in rats lacking vasopressin. 38 37
The first known case of obstetric shock followed by diabetes insipidus without anterior pituitary deficiency is presented. A patient developed extreme thirst and
polyuria
after massive bleeding and prolonged shock due to placenta previa percreta with bladder invasion. Evaluation confirmed diabetes insipidus sensitive to
vasopressin
administration. Anterior pituitary deficiency could not be identified, either acutely or 6 months later.
...
PMID:Diabetes insipidus following obstetric shock. 42 17
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>