Disorders of vasopressin Flashcards

1
Q

From which nuclei do magnocellular neurons arise?

A

paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei in the hypothalamus

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2
Q

Which nucleus releases vasopressin?

A

paraventricular nucleus

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3
Q

What are the two functions of vasopressin?

A
  1. vasoconstriction 2. stimulates water reabsorption in renal collecting duct
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4
Q

Which receptor does vasopressin act on to stimulate water reabsorption in the collecting duct?

A

V2

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5
Q

How does vasopressin work to concentrate the urine?

A

binds to V2 receptors in collecting duct and activates a G protein, resulting in an intracellular cascade, causing the transport of aquaporins to the apical membrane.

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6
Q

What are the two stimuli for vasopressin release?

A

rise in plasma osmolarity, and a reduced pressure detected by atrial stretch receptors.

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7
Q

what happens during haemorrhage, in terms of vasopressin?

A

Reduction in BP detected by atrial stretch receptors, resulting in less vasopressin inhibition, meaning more vasopressin is released and more water is absorbed into the plasma from the collecting duct.

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8
Q

Where are the osmoreceptors located?

A

organum vasculosum and subfornical organ

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9
Q

when sodium concentration increases, what happens to the osmoreceptors and subsequent release of vasopressin?

A

osmoreceptors shrink due to water leaving them due to osmosis. They increase their firing rate, increasing the release of vasopressin from the paraventricular nucleus, and subsequently the posterior pituitary. This causes more water to be reabsorbed from the collecting duct into the blood, reducing plasma osmolality.

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10
Q

name 3 symptoms of diabetes insipidus?

A

polyuria, polydipsia, nocturia

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11
Q

In a blood test, what would show in a DI patient?

A

hyperosmolar blood plasma, hypernatraemia, normal glucose

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12
Q

when the posterior pituitary is not releasing vasopressin, what is this called?

A

cranial diabetes insipidus

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13
Q

when the collecting ducts don’t respond to vasopressin, what is this called?

A

nephrogenic diabetes insipidus

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14
Q

lithium is a cause of which type of DI?

A

nephrogenic

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15
Q

traumatic brain injury, pituitary tumours, pituitary surgery, metastasis, autoimmunity and granulomatous infiltration of pituitary stalk eg. sarcoidosis are a cause of which type of DI?

A

cranial

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16
Q

How do you distinguish between psychogenic polydipsia and diabetes insipidus?

A

water deprivation test

17
Q

compare and contrast the results of the water deprivation test between someone with DI and someone with psychogenic polydipsia

A

In psychogenic polydipsia, urine osmolality would increase in a similar way to a normal person, but slightly less because their body is used to drinking more. In DI, urine osmolality will not increase much, if it all

18
Q

Why is it important to weigh the patient regularly during the water deprivation test?

A

The test must be stopped if the patient loses >3% of their body weight which is a marker of severe dehydration

19
Q

How do you distinguish between cranial and nephrogenic diabetes insipidus?

A

Give ddAVP (desmopressin) which will cause urine osmolality to rise in a similar way to a normal person, in someone with cranial DI, but in nephrogenic DI, will not see any increase as the collecting duct is unable to respond.

20
Q

What is the normal range for plasma osmolality?

A

270-290 mOsm/kg H2O

21
Q

Decreased plasma osmolality is a sign of DI or psychogenic polydipsia?

A

psychogenic polydipsia

22
Q

what is the treatment for cranial DI?

A

ddAVP

23
Q

what is the treatment for nephrogenic DI?

A

thiazide diuretics

24
Q

what does SIADH stand for?

A

syndrome of inappropriate anti-diuretic hormone

25
Q

Too much arginine vasopressin release is known as?

A

SIADH

26
Q

low plasma osmolarity, reduced urine output and water retention are symptoms of?

A

SIADH

27
Q

head injury, stroke, tumour, pneumonia, bronchiestasis , lung cancer, carbemazepine, SSRIs are a cause of?

A

SIADH

28
Q

A patient has these symptoms: Wakes up in night to pass urine excessive thirst polyuria in the day excessive drinking water What tests would you do?

A

blood tests to check glucose + hbA1c and rule out diabetes mellitus if this comes back normal, do: serum sodium water deprivation test

29
Q

How would you distinguish between psychogenic polydipsia and diabetes insipidus?

A

water deprivation test

30
Q

How would you distinguish between cranial and nephrogenic diabetes insipidus?

A

ddAVP (synthetic arginine vasopressin), see an increase in urine osmolality in cranial, no response in nephrogenic

31
Q

If you diagnose cranial DI, what other tests/scans should you do?

A

MRI scan

32
Q

what’s the diagnosis?

A

cranial diabetes insipidus

33
Q

A patient has:

  • high plasma osmolality
  • low urine osmolality
  • polydipsia
  • nocturia
  • polyuria
  • normal blood glucose and hbA1c

what’s the most likely diagnoses?

A

diabetes insipidus - cranial or nephrogenic

34
Q

what does high plasma sodium indicate?

A

dehydration

35
Q

A patient has these results/symptoms:

  • polydipsia
  • polyuria
  • nocturia
  • low serum/plasma osmolality
  • hyponatraemia
  • low urine osmolality that increases in osmolality during the water deprivation test

What is the diagnosis?

A

psychogenic polydipsia