Posterior pituitary pathology Flashcards

1
Q

What is the more common name for arginine vasopressin deficiency?

A

Diabetes insipidus

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2
Q

What is diabetes insipidus?

A

This is a deficiency or insensitivity to ADH in the body

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3
Q

What are the 2 types of diabetes insipidus?

A

Central
Nephrogenic

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4
Q

What are some acquired causes of DI?

A
  • Idiopathic
  • Trauma (Road accidents, surgery, skull fracture)
  • Tumours
  • Hypophysitis
  • Metastases
  • Meningitis
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5
Q

What causes familial DI?

A

Familial DI is very rare and in most cases is isolated

It can, however, be caused by Wolfran syndrome, as part of the DIDMOAD effects:

  • DI - Diabetes Insipidus
  • DM - Diabetes Mellitus
  • OA - Optic atrophy
  • D - Deafness
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6
Q

What is central DI?

A

Central diabetes insipidus is a deficiency of ADH due to disfunction of the hypothalamus or posterior pituitary

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7
Q

What are the main causes of central DI?

A
  • Trauma (Including surgery)
  • Tumours
  • Inflammatory disorders
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8
Q

How does nephrogenic DI occur?

A

This is caused by renal tubular resistance to the effects of ADH

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9
Q

What test is used to diagnose DI?

A

Water deprivation test

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10
Q

How is a water deprivation test performed?

A
  1. Check serum and urine osmolarity for 8 hours, and then 4 hours after giving desmopressin (DDAVP)
  2. If Ur:Serum osmolarity is >2, then it is normal
  3. If the ratio improves with DDAVP, then it is due to arginine vasopressin deficiency (Cranial DI)
  4. Differentiate from arginine vasopressin resistance (Nephrogenic DI)
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11
Q

What is the main calculation for estimating serum osmolarity?

A

2[K] + 2[Na] + [urea] + [glucose] = serum osmolarity

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12
Q

What are some causes of nephrogenic DI?

A
  • Idiopathic
  • Familial (AVPR2 receptor mutations)
  • Renal disease
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13
Q

How does DI present?

A
  • Polydipsia
  • Polyuria with dilute urine
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14
Q

How is central DI managed?

A

Desmopressin

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15
Q

What are the 3 forms of desmopressin?

A
  • Desmospray - Nasally 10-60mcg/day
  • Desmopressin tablets - 100-1000mcg/day
  • Desmopressin injection - 1-2mcg/day
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16
Q

How is nephrogenic DI managed?

A

There is no current pharmacological treatment for nephrogenic

17
Q

What does SIADH stand for?

A

Syndrome of Inappropriate ADH secretion

18
Q

What is SIADH?

A

This is a complex paraneoplastic syndrome in which the tumour secretes large amounts of Anti-Diuretic Hormone (ADH), resulting in hyponatraemia (Low sodium concentration)

19
Q

What is the most common cause of SIADH?

A

Small cell lung cancer

20
Q

How does SIADH present?

A
  • Nausea
  • Myoclonus (Sudden brief muscle twitching)
  • Lethargy
  • Confusion
  • Seizures
  • Possible coma
21
Q

How is SIADH managed?

A

Fluid restriction and possible demeclocycline

22
Q
A