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)

Water balance is tightly regulated within a tolerance of less than 1 percent by a physiologic control system located in the hypothalamus. Body water homeostasis is achieved by balancing renal and nonrenal water losses with appropriate water intake. The major stimulus to thirst is increased osmolality of body fluids as perceived by osmoreceptors in the anteroventral hypothalamus. Hypovolemia also has an important effect on thirst which is mediated by arterial baroreceptors and by the renin-angiotensin system. Renal water loss is determined by the circulating level of the antidiuretic hormone, arginine vasopressin (AVP). AVP is synthesized in specialized neurosecretory cells located in the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei in the hypothalamus and is transported in neurosecretory granules down elongated axons to the posterior pituitary. Depolarization of the neurosecretory neurons results in the exocytosis of the granules and the release of AVP and its carrier protein (neurophysin) into the circulation. AVP is secreted in response to a wide variety of stimuli. Change in body fluid osmolality is the most potent factor affecting AVP secretion, but hypovolemia, the renin-angiotensin system, hypoxia, hypercapnia, hyperthermia and pain also have important effects. Many drugs have been shown to stimulate the release of AVP as well. Small changes in plasma AVP concentration of from 0.5 to 4 muU per ml have major effects on urine osmolality and renal water handling.
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PMID:The clinical physiology of water metabolism. Part I: The physiologic regulation of arginine vasopressin secretion and thirst. 39 80

Intranasal administration of DDAVP (1-deamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin), a synthetic analogue of vasopressin, followed by measurement of urine osmolaity 6 h afterwards, represents a convenient, reliable and simple method for the estimation of renal concentrating capacity in children. The DDAVP-test is as accurate and reproducible as the water deprivation test, irrespective of the degree of concentrating capacity. Mean urine osmolality after DDAVP in children without renal disease was found to be 984 +/- 218 mosmol/kg water (m +/- 2 SD). In children with recurrent pyelonephritis, urine osmolality after DDAVP was decreased. The values were significantly lower with bilateral changes than with unilateral changes of chronic pyelonephritis in the i.v. urograms. In chronic pyelonephritis the concentrating capacity appears to be earlier impaired than other parameters of renal function.
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PMID:Intranasal DDAVP-test in the study of renal concentrating capacity in children with recurrent urinary tract infections. 42 96

The presence of vasopressin (VP) in pars distalis of rats and pigs was investigated. Using radioimmunoassay and bioassay of VP, a substance with immunological and biological properties of this hormone was found. This substance was not detected in the adenohypophysis of rats with diabetes insipidus. A partial purification of the VP-like peptide showed that it had the chromatographic and electrophoretic properties of VP. It could be identified with arginine vasopressin (AVP) in the case of the rat and lysine-vasopressin (LVP) in the case of the pig. In the Wistar strain, adrenalectomy induced progressively increasing concentrations of adenohypophysial VP. This increase was significant 15 days after surgery. It could be prevented by treatment with dexamethasone. These results indicate that the presence of VP in the anterior pituitary is related to the regulation of ACTH secretion.
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PMID:Evidence of vasopressin in adenohypophysis: research into its role in corticotrope activity. 43 70

Idiopathic edema is characterized by impaired water excretion, particularly in the upright posture. Indirect evidence has shown that antidiuretic hormone is involved in this disease. For this reason, we measured urinary arginine vasopressin by radioimmunoassay before and during water loading (15 ml/kg) in 10 normal women and in 10 subjects with idiopathic edema in both the supine and upright postures. Daily sodium intake was 100 meq. Renin and aldosterone were concomitantly investigated, and abnormally high values were observed both in the recumbent and upright postures. Basal values for urinary arginine vasopressin were identical in control subjects and in patients with idiopathic edema. The water load significantly reduced urinary arginine vasopressin in normal women in both positions, but in those with idiopathic edema only in the supine position. In those with idiopathic edema, assumption of the upright posture was accompanied by a transient decrease in glomerular filtration, a major decrease in osmolar clearance and no decrease in urinary arginine vasopressin after water loading. Significant correlations were established between urinary arginine vasopressin and osmolar or volemic parameters in normal women, but these correlations were not found in those with idiopathic edema in either position. Arginine vasopressin regulation was abnormal in idiopathic edema, and this hormone was believed to play a part in the pathogenesis of this disease.
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PMID:Abnormal regulation of antidiuretic hormone in idiopathic edema. 46 18

Six conscious intact dogs were studied to evaluate the interactions of somatostatin (SRIF) with exogenous antidiuretic hormone arginine vasopressin (AVP). SRIF administration caused a significant increase in free water clearance compared to a vehicle-treated group: -0.91 (+/- 0.41 SD) ml/min to 0.21 (+/- 0.32 SD) ml/min in the experimental group (P less than 0.01) versus 0.21 (+/- 0.81 SD) ml/min to -0.21 (+/- 0.68 SD) ml/min in the control (P greater than 0.5). Six conscious, thyroparathyroidectomized dogs were studied to test the interaction of SRIF and parathyroid extract (PTE). There were no significant changes in the phosphaturic and hypocalciuric effects of PTE with SRIF administration. We conclude that acute systemic SRIF administration interferes with the antidiuretic action of AVP, probably at the renal-tubular level, but does not antagonize the renal actions of PTE.
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PMID:Interaction of somatostatin with PTH and AVP: renal effects. 49 45

In a double-blind controlled trial the possible prophylactic effect of intranasally applicated DDAVP (1-desamino-8-arginine vasopressin, Minurin)--a synthetic analogue of vasopressin--is evaluated regarding the incidence of headache following lumbar puncture (LBP) in 51 patients and following pneumoencephalography (PEG) in 28 patients. DDAVP had no statistically significant effect on the incidence of headache or on the consumption of analgesics in the DDAVP-versus placebo groups (minimal relevant difference = 50%, 2 alpha = 0.05, beta = 0.50).
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PMID:DDAVP, a synthetic analogue of vasopressin, in prevention of headache after lumbar puncture and lumbar pneumoencephalography. 51 18

Chronic exposure of mice to ethanol leads to the development of functional tolerance to the hypothermic and sedative effects of this drug. Treatment of the animals with the mammalian antidiuretic hormone, arginine vasopressin, results in a prolonged duration of such tolerance, in comparison to animals exposed to ethanol but not to the hormone. Another neurohypophyseal hormone, oxytocin, at an equimolar dose, is ineffective in maintaining tolerance. The centrally mediated effects of arginine vasopressin on memory processes may be related to the hormone-induced prolongation of ethanol tolerance.
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PMID:Peptide--neurotransmitter interactions influencing ethanol tolerance. 52 81

1. The possible pressor effect of vasopressin immediately after acute haemorrhage has been studied using anaesthetized Brattleboro rats with diabetes insipidus and rats of the Long Evans parent strain.2. A blood loss of 0.5% of the body weight caused a significant decrease in mean arterial blood pressure, measured 10 min later, in Brattleboro rats, whereas this degree of haemorrhage was non-hypotensive in the control Long Evans rats. Following subsequent blood losses (each of 0.5% of the body weight), mean arterial blood pressure in Brattleboro rats was always significantly lower than in Long Evans rats.3. While no antidiuretic activity was at any time found in the plasma of Brattleboro rats, haemorrhages greater than 1% of the body weight were associated with marked increases in plasma arginine vasopressin (AVP) of Long Evans rats.4. When Brattleboro and Long Evans rats were subjected to a single haemorrhage of 2% of the body weight, the immediate decrease in arterial blood pressure was similar in the two groups. However, 5 and 10 min after the haemorrhage the arterial blood pressure was significantly higher in the Long Evans rats. When vasopressin was infused into Brattleboro rats so that plasma levels of the hormone approached those found in Long Evans rats, the mean arterial blood pressure 0, 5 and 10 min after haemorrhage was similar to that in the Long Evans animals.5. It is concluded that in the anaesthetized rat, vasopressin plays an important role in the regulation of arterial blood pressure during the period immediately following acute haemorrhage.
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PMID:The role of vasopressin in blood pressure regulation immediately following acute haemorrhage in the rat. 52 92

Intracerebral injections of puromycin one day after training of mice in a Y-maze cause amnesia when the animals are tested 7 days later. This amnesia was shown to be attenuated by various neurohypophyseal hormones, analogs and fragments, administered subcutaneously immediately after training. Dose-response relationships have been obtained for the attenuation of puromycin-induced amnesia in mice by selected neurohypophyseal peptides. All of the compounds tested reduce the amnesia in a dose-related way, suggesting that these peptides may interact with specific receptors to induce their central effect. Among the peptides studied the two most potent--i.e., those that cause substantial retention of memory at the lowest doses--are the neurohypophyseal hormone arginine vasopressin and Z-prolyl-leucyl-glycinamide (Z-MIF).
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PMID:Dose-response relationships in attenuation of puromycin-induced amnesia by neurohypophyseal peptides. 56 19

Twenty-four h urinary vasopressin excretion was measured by bioassay in 15 patients with untreated hypothyroidism and compared with plasma sodium concentration. Four patients had raised excretion of an antidiuretic substance and in 3 of these patients excretion was reduced after thyroid replacement therapy. The criteria applied supported the view that the antidiuretic substance was arginine vasopressin. Plasma sodium concentration was normal in all these 4 patients. A further 4 patients had hyponatraemia without raised arginine vasopressin excretion. The results suggest that: (1) excess arginine vasopressin secretion is not the cause of the hyponatraemia of hypothyroidism and (2) an increased secretion of arginine vasopressin does occur in some cases of normonatraemic hypothyroidism, the cause requiring further elucidation.
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PMID:Increased vasopressin excretion in patients with hypothyroidism. 58 Aug 29


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