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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The intracarotid infusion of hypertonic
sodium chloride
in anesthetized dogs pretreated with
vasopressin
and mineralocorticoid resulted in an increase in sodium excretion as well as an increase in the percent of the filtered load of sodium excreted. This increase was not due to changes in renal hemodynamics or arterial blood pressure. The change in fractional sodium excretion was approximately 1%. Intracarotid infusion of isotonic
sodium chloride
did not result in a natriuretic response. The intracarotid infusion of hyperosmotic glucose did not evoke an increase in sodium excretion. Femoral vein infusions of hypertonic
sodium chloride
failed to evoke any natriuretic response. These data indicate that a sodium-sensing mechanism may exist in the brain that can alter the renal handling of sodium. The efferent mechanism of the response is discussed.
...
PMID:Natriuresis induced by intracarotid infusion of hypertonic NaCl. 125 24
Rats euhydrated and dehydrated for two or four days were given intracerebroventricularly (i.c.v.) thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) in a daily dose of 200 ng dissolved in 10 microliters of 0.9%
sodium chloride
.) A single dose of TRH administered to euhydrated animals was followed by a significant increase of the
vasopressin
content in the neurohypophysis and hypothalamus as well as of the hypothalamic oxytocin content. On the contrary, a single dose of TRH decreased the oxytocin content in the neurohypophysis. Under conditions of dehydration TRH distinctly restrained the decrease of
vasopressin
and oxytocin in the hypothalamus. In animals dehydrated for two or four days the decrease of oxytocin in the neurohypophysis, brought about by stimulation of osmoreceptors, was distinctly more marked under treatment with TRH. On the contrary, the depletion of neurohypophysial
vasopressin
was significantly less apparent under such conditions. 28 nmol/L TRH markedly increased
vasopressin
release but inhibited that of oxytocin from the neurointermediate lobes incubated in vitro both under basal conditions as well as during stimulation with excess (56 mmol) potassium.
...
PMID:Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) and vasopressin and oxytocin release: in vitro as well as in vivo studies. 130 67
Hyponatraemia (HN) can result from a wide range of mechanisms, and therapy must be individualized. Two theories of the origin of HN in acute brain disease have prevailed. The first is the cerebral salt wasting syndrome (CSWS), where excessive natriuresis caused by some unknown cerebral natriuretic factor lowers the total sodium pool of the body and hence the plasma concentration. The second theory is the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
(SIADH), where an increase in total body water is caused by unphysiological secretion of ADH, lowering the concentration of sodium in the plasma. A third possibility is 'sodium shift', i.e. a displacement of sodium from the extracellular to the intracellular space with a simultaneous movement of potassium in the opposite direction. The morbidity and mortality associated with HN only arise in cases where the rate of development of HN was 0.5 mmol h-1 or more. Symptoms respond promptly when the HN is quickly corrected with furosemide and 3%
sodium chloride
.
...
PMID:Hyponatraemia in acute brain disease. 132 60
The influence of aminergic pathways on basal and stimulated
vasopressin
(AVP) release was studied in conscious rats, the stimulus for hormone release being an intracerebroventricular (ICV) injection of 5 microliters 0.85M
sodium chloride
. The animals were treated with either phenoxybenzamine, propranolol or haloperidol prior to administration of the central hypertonic stimulus. Phenoxybenzamine elevated basal plasma
vasopressin
concentrations, while propranolol and haloperidol had no effect. The secretion of AVP in response to the hypertonic stimulus was potentiated by phenoxybenzamine and haloperidol, but the effect of propranolol was equivocal. The antagonists had no effect on basal arterial pressure at the time of hypertonic saline administration or the pressor response to ICV
sodium chloride
.
...
PMID:Aminergic control of vasopressin secretion in the conscious rat. 145 Apr 34
A 54-year-old schizophrenic patient who presented with hyponatremia and nephrotic-range proteinuria was subsequently discovered to have a gastric adenocarcinoma. Psychogenic water drinking, sodium depletion, and cardiac, adrenal, hepatic, and thyroid disease were excluded as causes of hyponatremia. The serum creatinine concentration was normal, and, although renal biopsy showed changes consistent with immune complex glomerulopathy, proteinuria remitted without treatment. Moderately severe hyponatremia persisted, and the diagnosis of gastric adenocarcinoma was made after the onset of early satiety 1 year later. Surgical exploration at the time of partial gastric resection revealed local metastatic lymph node involvement. Following the patient's uneventful recovery from surgery, studies of osmoregulation of
vasopressin
release and renal water handling were performed to determine the cause of chronic hyponatremia refractory to
sodium chloride
administration. Oral water loading studies revealed normal urinary diluting ability and appropriate suppression of plasma
vasopressin
concentrations. However, hypertonic
sodium chloride
infusion studies revealed a highly significant correlation between plasma osmolality and plasma
vasopressin
concentration, and a low osmotic threshold for
vasopressin
release based on linear regression analysis of the plasma
vasopressin
response to increasing plasma osmolality. Low osmotic threshold for
vasopressin
release was confirmed by exponential (log linear) and parabolic methods of data analysis. The findings in these studies are consistent with the typical features of the reset osmostat variant of the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuresis. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the occurrence of this syndrome in association with gastric adenocarcinoma.
...
PMID:Chronic hyponatremia due to resetting of the osmostat in a patient with gastric carcinoma. 836 36
In situ hybridization histochemistry and indirect immunofluorescence histochemistry were used to study changes in the expression of
vasopressin
(VP), oxytocin (OXY), tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), galanin (GAL), dynorphin (DYN) and cholecystokinin (CCK) in hypothalamic magnocellular neurons of the paraventricular (PVN) and supraoptic (SON) nuclei of rats. After prolonged administration of 2%
sodium chloride
as drinking water (salt-loading), the treatment increased the levels of VP, OXY, TH, GAL, DYN and CCK mRNA in the PVN and SON. The increase in CCK mRNA was, however, proportionally higher in the PVN than in the SON. Within cell bodies of the PVN and SON of salt-loaded rats, a depletion of VP- and OXY-like immunoreactivity (LI) and an increase in TH-LI were seen. In salt-loaded/colchicine-treated rats, a marked decrease in GAL- and DYN-LI, but no specific changes in CCK-LI were observed. Within nerve fibers of the posterior pituitary of salt-loaded rats, a marked depletion of VP-, GAL- and DYN-LI was found. Less pronounced depletion was observed in OXY- and CCK-LI, and no specific changes in TH-LI were seen. The results show that high plasma osmolality induces increased mRNA levels for VP, OXY, TH, GAL, DYN and CCK, presumably indicating increased synthesis, an increased export from cell somata of VP, OXY, GAL and DYN, and a decrease in levels of these peptides in the posterior pituitary, suggesting increased release. The catecholamine-synthesizing enzyme TH, however, which has a cytoplasmic localization and is not released from nerve endings, remains high in the cell bodies and nerve endings during this state of increased activity.
...
PMID:Peptides and transmitter enzymes in hypothalamic magnocellular neurons after administration of hyperosmotic stimuli: comparison between messenger RNA and peptide/protein levels. 169 5
These studies were designed to investigate whether the centrally mediated pressor effects of hypertonic
sodium chloride
(NaCl) solutions are triggered in response to changes in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) osmolality and whether the chloride ion plays a role in these effects. In Inactin anesthetized, vagotomized rats, alterations in the arterial pressure to cerebroventricular administration (i.c.v.) of various concentrations of NaCl, sodium nitrate (NaNO3), glycerol, creatinine, lithium chloride (LiCl), lithium nitrate (LiNO3) and choline chloride were evaluated. The pressor effects of NaCl were significantly greater than those produced by either glycerol, creatinine and/or NaNO3 solutions. Central effects of NaCl were identical to that of LiCl; likewise, NaNO3 and LiNO3 produced essentially similar increases in the blood pressure. In other words, the two chloride salts produced significantly greater increases in the arterial pressure than the nitrate salts. Choline chloride also produced significant increases in the blood pressure both before and after pretreatment with hemicholinum (i.c.v.). In a separate series of experiments, pretreatment of rats with a
vasopressin
antagonist (i.v.), significantly attenuated the pressor effects of NaCl, NaNO3 and that of choline chloride whereas after autonomic ganglionic blockade with chlorisondamine, pressor responses of only NaCl, but not those of NaNO3 or choline chloride were significantly inhibited. These data indicate that elevation of either Na+ or Cl- in the CSF facilitates
vasopressin
secretion and that Na+ and Cl- ions function synergistically in the central nervous system (C.N.S.) to enhance sympathetic activity. The present studies demonstrate that the circumventricular structures in the C.N.S. that participate in the regulation of blood pressure are more responsive to changes in concentrations of Na+ and Cl- rather than to net changes in the CSF osmolality. The data further suggest that the chloride ion contributes to the central pressor effects of NaCl and may play a role in the pathophysiology of salt-dependent hypertension.
...
PMID:Studies on the role(s) of cerebrospinal fluid osmolality and chloride ion in the centrally mediated pressor responses of sodium chloride. 182 60
Studies of renal water handling and the effects of altered hydration and posture on the osmoregulation of
vasopressin
release were performed on a chronically hyponatremic patient with complete cervical spinal cord transection at the C-5 level. Acute oral water loading studies showed marked reduction in free water clearance and urine diluting ability, despite appropriate suppression of plasma
vasopressin
concentrations. Orthostatic reductions in arterial blood pressure during head-up tilting and following the assumption of sitting posture were also demonstrable, and may have contributed to, but could not fully account for, the defect in renal water excretion, which persisted in supine posture. Hypertonic
sodium chloride
infusion studies performed before fluid restriction showed that low preinfusion plasma osmolality was associated with a reduced osmotic threshold for
vasopressin
release, which was subsequently corrected by a period of fluid restriction that restored the patient's plasma osmolality to a normal level. This shift in osmotic threshold can be inferred from both linear regression and log-linear regression analysis of the data. These studies show that marked impairment of renal water excretion coupled with unrestricted water intake can result in altered osmoregulation of
vasopressin
release in association with persistent plasma hypo-osmolality, which can be corrected by fluid restriction.
...
PMID:Reversible changes in osmoregulation of vasopressin release due to impaired water excretion. 186 85
The present study examined whether alterations in papillary blood flow, renal interstitial pressure (RIHP), and the pressure-natriuretic (PN) response are associated with the development of hypertension in inbred Dahl salt-sensitive (Dahl-S) rats. The PN responses were compared in 18- to 20-wk-old, Inactin-anesthetized, inbred Dahl salt-sensitive (S/Jr) and salt-resistant (R/Jr) rats fed a low-(0.3%) and a high- (8.0%)
sodium chloride
diet. Cortical and papillary blood flows were measured using laser-Doppler flowmetry. Neural and hormonal influences on the kidney were controlled by renal denervation and by fixing plasma norepinephrine,
vasopressin
, corticosterone, and aldosterone levels by intravenous infusion. The slope of the PN relationship in S/Jr rats maintained on a low-salt diet was 62% lower than that observed in R/Jr rats; however, whole kidney, cortical, and papillary blood flows and RIHP were not significantly different at any perfusion pressure studied. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was 25% lower in S/Jr rats than in R/Jr animals maintained on a low-salt diet. The slopes of the PN responses were similar in S/Jr and R/Jr rats exposed to a high-salt diet, but the entire relationship was shifted toward higher pressures by 20 mmHg in the S/Jr rats. Control cortical and papillary blood flows measured at control mean arterial pressures of 126 +/- 3 and 167 +/- 5 mmHg in R/Jr and S/Jr rats, respectively, were not significantly different. However, cortical and papillary blood flows were 25% lower in the S/Jr than in the R/Jr rats exposed to a high-salt diet when compared at equivalent renal perfusion pressures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pressure natriuresis and cortical and papillary blood flow in inbred Dahl rats. 188 48
The syndrome of inappropriate secretion of arginine vasopressin (AVP) known as the syndrome of inappropriate
antidiuretic hormone
secretion (SIADH) is characterized by hyponatremia that results from water retention attributable to persistent AVP release. It may occur in a variety of malignant and nonmalignant lesions, with small cell or oat cell carcinoma of the lung by far responsible for the largest number of these cases. Cancer of the head and neck may be a rare cause of SIADH, and only a few such cases have been reported. We describe four patients with advanced cancer of the head and neck region with coexisting SIADH. Diagnosis and treatment are reported and the literature is reviewed. The possible occurrence of SIADH in the head and neck surgical practice should be kept in mind. Since SIADH is usually transient, water restriction and parenteral
sodium chloride
may be sufficient in overcoming the acute phase.
...
PMID:Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion in cancer of the head and neck. 201 96
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