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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
On three occasions over a 21-month period, a woman with multiple sclerosis presented with hypothermia accompanied by altered consciousness, neurological signs and inappropriate
antidiuretic hormone
secretion. One of the episodes included hypoglycaemia. Although repeated
MRI
examinations, one of them with gadolinium injection, gave negative results, hypothalamic demyelination was suspected. The 4-year follow-up of this patient suggests that this lesion has no prognostic value.
...
PMID:[Hypothermia and multiple sclerosis. A case with 3 episodes of transient hypothermia]. 229 Oct 41
A 31-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of a sudden onset of thirst, polyposia, and polyuria. Five years previously he had been admitted to our hospital because of a dry cough. On the first admission, the chest X-ray film had shown reticular shadows and bullous changes in both upper lung fields. Histological examination of a transbronchial lung biopsy specimen had revealed that the nodular lesion in the interstitium of the alveolar lesion consisted of an aggregate of many Langerhans cells with pale cytoplasm and partly convoluted nuclei. In addition, immunoperoxidase stain for S-100 protein had been strongly positive in numerous Langerhans cells in a bone biopsy specimen from a left mandibullar lesion, which is the same histological appearance as the lung lesion. A diagnosis of pulmonary eosinophilic granuloma had been made. The course after discharge was not progressive without treatment for 5 years, but the patient suddenly began to have thirst, polyposia, and polyuria. Dehydration,
vasopressin
tests, and the findings of
MRI
indicated diabetes insipidus due to a pathological change in the pituitary gland. Although diabetes insipidus is known to be a common complication of pulmonary eosinophilic granuloma, only 9 cases have been reported in Japan.
...
PMID:[A case of pulmonary eosinophilic granuloma and diabetes insipidus]. 760 47
We describe a patient with presenile-onset cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy presenting as Balint's syndrome and dementia. There were demyelinating
MRI
changes in the parieto-occipital white matter bilaterally, including the splenium of the corpus callosum. Therapeutic trials using 1-deamino-(8-D-arginine)-
vasopressin
, very long-chain fatty acid-free diet, and gamma-globulin were of no benefit.
...
PMID:Presenile-onset cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy presenting as Balint's syndrome and dementia. 817 May 77
The posterior pituitary high signal (PPHS) seen on
MRI
of the sella in normal individuals probably reflects
antidiuretic hormone
(
ADH
) granules stored in the posterior pituitary lobe (PPL). We present a case with anorexia nervosa, high serum
ADH
, and oliguria who underwent three cerebral MR studies over the course of treatment. The first MR examination showed absence of PPHS and early enhancement of the PPL on dynamic
MRI
. In subsequent MR examinations PPHS became evident in concomitance with clinical improvement. This case suggests that PPHS changes may reflect reaccumulation of
ADH
granules and that dynamic MR of the PPL may be useful for assessing the vascularity of the PPL and/or the reversibility of its function.
...
PMID:Serial MR intensity changes of the posterior pituitary in a patient with anorexia nervosa, high serum ADH, and oliguria. 833 Dec 38
A 62-year-old male with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) associated with Cushing's syndrome and diabetes insipidus (DI) is reported. The patient was referred to our hospital for treatment of SCLC. A diagnosis of paraneoplastic Cushing's syndrome was made on the basis of an elevated serum ACTH (623.5 pg/ml) level, elevated excretion of urinary 17-OHCS (18.01 mg/day), obesity, hypertension, hyperglycemia, persistent hypokalemia, alkalosis, and no history of diabetes mellitus. He was also diagnosed as having DI based on polyuria and polydipsia, low specific gravity of the urine (1.007-1.010), low serum ADH (1.4 pg/ml) level, normal plasma osmolarity (29 mOsm/kg H2O), and the results of water deprivation test. DI and a left visual field defect was suggestive of metastasis to the pituitary region, but no lesion was detected by either CT scan or
MRI
scan. The patient failed to show a good response to intensive chemotherapy, and died of the tumor five months after commencing chemotherapy. Post-mortem examination revealed metastases to the hypothalamic-
neurohypophyseal
region, lungs, liver, adrenal glands, bone, bone marrow, and hilar and mediastinal lymph nodes.
...
PMID:[A case of small cell lung cancer associated with diabetes insipidus and Cushing's syndrome]. 839 May 89
A 50-year-old Japanese man had been suffering from polydipsia and polyuria for 2 months without any other specific symptoms. His daily urinary output reached 5 liters. On admission, no abnormalities of the kidneys, heart, thyroid, adrenals, pituitary or hypothalamus were detected by laboratory tests and
MRI
of the head. Pure psychogenic polydipsia was ruled out because his urine volume did not decrease sufficiently with 18 h of water deprivation and the subsequent injection of aqueous
vasopressin
. Plasma arginine vasopressin (AVP) levels against plasma osmolality remained within the normal range during the test. These results indicated that diabetes insipidus in this case was caused by renal insensitivity to AVP. The symptoms disappeared spontaneously, and marked improvement was observed in a second water deprivation test 1 month later, although the maximum urine concentration was still subnormal. The combination of both latent insufficiency of AVP secretion and impairment of the renal countercurrent system induced by psychogenic polydipsia was speculated as a possible mechanism for the transient nephrogenic diabetes insipidus in this case.
...
PMID:Transient nephrogenic diabetes insipidus accompanied by possible psychogenic polydipsia. 852 83
Chlorpropamide (CPM) has been reported to produce impaired water excretion due to the enhancement of renal
vasopressin
(ADH) action and/or due to centrally enhanced ADH release, but it is still unknown whether CPM gives rise to ADH release with a subsequent hyponatremia in diabetes mellitus (DM), which, in turn, causes an impairment of the central nervous system. In 3 patients with DM, who developed hyponatremia during the treatment with CPM, an acute water load (WL) was carried out in the presence and absence of the drug, and plasma ADH was determined with plasma and urine osmolalities. Moreover, in 2 cases,
MRI
scans of the brain were taken. In all the patients, acute WL tests failed to suppress completely ADH release in response to changes in plasma osmolality in the presence of CPM, which, in turn, resulted in the impaired water excretion. In the absence of CPM, an acute WL normally suppressed plasma ADH leading to the diuresis.
MRI
scans illustrated the presence of central pontine myelinolysis. It is likely that CPM might stimulate ADH release in DM with a subsequent hyponatremia and brain damages.
...
PMID:Chlorpropamide-induced ADH release, hyponatremia and central pontine myelinolysis in diabetes mellitus. 892 90
Central diabetes insipidus is a chronic disorder which in most patients occurs secondary to tumor, infection, trauma or other lesions. In about 20-30% of patients etiology is unclear, however a destructive autoimmune process in the hypophysis may play a role. We report the case of an 18-year-old girl with central diabetes insipidus. Vasopressin levels were typically decreased. Examinations performed 1.5 years after manifestation showed no pathologic changes on
MRI
and no additional endocrine disorder.
MRI
was repeated 1.5 years later whereon a thickening of the pituitary stalk as a typical sign of hypophysitis was apparent. No other reasons could be found for the
vasopressin
deficiency. The finding of hypophysitis in our patient 3 years after disease manifestation suggests that the characteristic
MRI
changes may take as long as 3 years to become apparent.
...
PMID:Diabetes insipidus due to hypophysitis. 903 Sep 72
The physicochemical properties of water enable it to act as a solvent for electrolytes, and to influence the molecular configuration and hence the function--enzymatic in particular--of polypeptide chains in biological systems. The association of water with electrolytes determines the osmotic regulation of cell volume and allows the establishment of the transmembrane ion concentration gradients that underlie nerve excitation and impulse conduction. Fluid in the central nervous system is distributed in the intracellular and extracellular spaces (ICS, ECS) of the brain parenchyma, the cerebrospinal fluid, and the vascular compartment--the brain capillaries and small arteries and veins. Regulated exchange of fluid between these various compartments occurs at the blood-brain barrier (BBB), and at the ventricular ependyma and choroid plexus, and, on the brain surface, at the pia mater. The normal BBB is relatively permeable to water, but considerably less so to ions, including the principal electrolytes Brain fluid regulation takes place within the context of systemic fluid volume control, which depends on the mutual interaction of osmo-, volume-, and pressure-receptors in the hypothalamus, heart and kidney, hormones such as
vasopressin
, renin-angiotensin, aldosterone, atriopeptins, and digitalis-like immunoreactive substance, and their respective sites of action. Evidence for specific transport capabilities of the cerebral capillary endothelium, for example high Na+K(+)-ATPase activity and the presence at the abluminal surface of a Na(+)--H+ antiporter, suggests that cerebral microvessels play a more active part in brain volume regulation and ion homoeostasis than do capillaries in other vascular beds. The normal brain ECS amounts to 12-19% of brain volume, and is markedly reduced in anoxia, ischaemia, metabolic poisoning, spreading depression, and conventional procedures for histological fixation. The asymmetrical distributions of Na+ K+ and Ca2+ between ICS and ECS underlie the roles of these cations in nerve excitation and conduction, and in signal transduction. The relatively large volume of the CSF, and extensive diffusional exchange of many substances between brain ECS and CSF, augment the ion-homeostasing capacity of the ECS. The choroid plexus, in addition to secreting CSF principally by biochemical mechanisms (there is an additional small component from the extracellular fluid), actively transports some substances from the blood (e.g. nucleotides and ascorbic acid), and actively removes others from the CSF. In contrast with CSF secretion, CSF reabsorption is principally a biomechanical process, passively dependent on the CSF-dural sinus pressure gradient. Pathological increases in intracranial water content imply development of an intracranial mass lesion. The additional water may be distributed diffusely within the brain parenchyma as brain oedema, as a cyst, or as increase in ventricular volume due to hydrocephalus. Brain oedema is classified on the basis of pathophysiology into four categories, vasogenic, cytotoxic, osmotic and hydrostatic. The clinical conditions in which brain oedema presents the greatest problems are tumour, ischaemia, and head injury. Peritumoural oedema is predominantly vasogenic and related to BBB dysfunction. Ischaemic oedema is initially cytotoxic, with a shift of Na+ and CI- ions from ECS to ICS, followed by osmotically obliged water, this shift can be detected by diffusion-weighted
MRI
. Later in the evolution of an ischaemic lesion the oedema becomes vasogenic, with disruption of the BBB. Recent imaging studies in patients with head injury suggest that the development of traumatic brain oedema may follow a biphasic time course similar to that of ischaemic oedema. Hydrocephalus is associated in the great majority of cases with an obstruction to the circulation or drainage of CSF, or, occasionally, with overproduction of CSF by a choroid plexus papilloma. In either case, the consequence is a ris
...
PMID:The normal and pathological physiology of brain water. 907 71
The aetiology of ACTH-independent macronodular adrenal hyperplasia (AIMAH) is uncertain. We examined a 55 year old man with Cushing's syndrome due to AIMAH, whose cortisol levels increased after stimulation with lysine-8-
vasopressin
(LVP) in vitro as well as in vivo. Abdominal
MRI
revealed nodular enlargement of both adrenal glands. No adenoma was evident on pituitary
MRI
. 131I-adosterol scintigraphy exhibited marked uptake into both adrenal glands. Although baseline plasma cortisol levels were within normal limits, urinary free cortisol excretion was 3-fold higher than the upper limit of the normal range. Plasma ACTH levels were undetectable. Oral dexamethasone failed to suppress plasma cortisol levels irrespective of dose, and administration of corticotrophin releasing hormone failed to increase plasma ACTH and cortisol levels. LVP injection failed to increase plasma ACTH levels, but elicited an increase in plasma cortisol levels. The direct stimulatory effect of LVP on cortisol secretion was confirmed in vitro in cultured adrenocortical cells from macronodules obtained at surgery. Food intake, gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP), or octreotide administration, which were reported to regulate cortisol release in patients with AIMAH, failed to affect plasma cortisol levels. In conclusion, plasma cortisol responsiveness to LVP, GIP, and octreotide is heterogeneous in patients with AIMAH.
...
PMID:Adrenocorticotrophin-independent macronodular adrenal hyperplasia in a patient with lysine vasopressin responsiveness but insensitivity to gastric inhibitory polypeptide. 949 82
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