MNE: Diabetes Insipidus

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MRI diagnosis of Central DI

1. disappearance of bright spot (for pituitary) = indicates a loss of neurons in the pituitary 2. thickened pituitary stalk = indicates inflammatory cause of Central DI (Lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis)

Hyperosmolar manifestations

1. dry mouth 2. thirst 3. decreased sweating 4. lethargy 5. disorientation 6. obtundation 7. coma 8. venous thrombosis (DVT, PE, CVA, death)

causes of Nephrogenic (Renal) DI

1. familial = mutations in either the AVP V2-receptor or the aquaporin-2 channel 2. acquired = result of hypercalcemia, hypokalemia, use of certain drugs (lithium and demeclocycline)

benefits of DDAVP

1. has a much longer half-life than AVP = can be administered only 2-3 times a day 2. intranasal and oral bioavailability 3. does NOT stimulate V1a receptors (in blood vessels)

Causes of Central (Neurogenic) DI

1. hypothalamic lesion (40-50% of cases) 2. idiopathic (20-30% of cases) = caused by an inflammatory attack on the posterior pituitary 3. genetic (5% of cases)

AVP

9-amino acid peptide located at the amino terminal end of a large precursor hormone (Vasotocin) the rest of the protein is secreted into the blood and has no biological effect

How do V2 receptors help retain water in kidney?

AVP binding V2 receptor activates a signal transduction cascade mediated by cAMP = causes insertion of Aquaporin water channels into the membrane of the collecting duct = allows for passage of water from collecting duct back into the bloodstream

Uosm increase of greater than 50% following AVP administration

indicates Central DI

Uosm increase of <10% following AVP administration

indicates Nephrogenic DI

Lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis

inflammatory attack on the posterior pituitary (neurohyophysis) resulting in Central DI often shows swelling of the pituitary stalk as a result of inflammatory response and edema

Nephrogenic (Renal) DI

kidney does not react to AVP

volume homeostasis

maintenance of ECF and plasma volume at adequate levels for tissue perfusion

osmotic homeostasis

maintenance of body osmolality (normal levels = 280-295 mOsm/kg water)

Primary Polydipsia

most common cause of polyuria in Western countries

antidiuresis

movement of water from collecting duct of kidney tubule through aquaporins back into the bloodstream

screening criteria Diabetes Insipidus (DI)?

need to define hypotonic polyuria: 1. 24-hr urine volume >50 mL/kg (under conditions of ad lib intake) 2. Urine-specific gravity <1.010 & Uosm <300 mOsm/kg water 3. absence of solute diuresis (urine dipstick = negative for glucose)

Nephrogenic DI

occurs as a result of defect or deficiency of AVP receptors in the kidneys no response to AVP secretion

Central DI

occurs because of insufficient Vasopressin (AVP) production

effective plasma osmolality

osmolality that causes fluid shift between the intracellular and extracellular space BUN does NOT contribute to this equation (can cross membranes freely to equalize its concentrations)

Osmotic Diuresis

osmotic agent in the urine (like glucose) causes polyuria frequently seen in diabetes mellitus

Overnight (outpatient) stimulation tests

patient must withhold all fluids after dinner until the following morning physician measures serum [Na+] and urine osmolality

Formal (inpatient) stimulation tests

patient withholds all fluids until their body weight decreases by 3-5%, urine osmolality plateaus by 2-3 successive measurements, or serum [Na+] >145 mmol/L 1. AVP is administered 2. Uosm and urine volume are followed for 2 more hours

Psychogenic DI

people are drinking too much for reasons other than true thirst (believe it is healthy, mental diseases such as schizophrenia, religious beliefs)

How do we diagnose DI?

perform stimulation tests = see if the patient still produces hypotonic urine in situations where they have high plasma osmolality

Sir Thomas Willis

person responsible for discovering that patients with diabetes mellitus had sweet tasting urine (because of glucose in urine) while urine of diabetes insipidus patients had no taste

Gestational DI

rare disorder that can occur during pregnancy

Dispogenic DI

reset thirst threshold due to lesions, granulomatous disease, idiopathic causes, or aging

Total plasma osmolality

sodium, chloride, and bicarbonate can calculate by multiplying the [Na+] by 2 (because equal amount of anions and cations)

Thirst

solely a neural mechanism

osmolality

solute (osmoles)/water (kg)

aquaporins

specific channel just for water (other molecules can't pass through)

diabetes insipidus CAN'T be diagnosed until?

the patient is shown to excrete a hypotonic urine despite the presence of a hyperosmolar serum

Fasting blood glucose labs

used to rule out Diabetes mellitus as a cause for the polyuria and polydipsia

V2 receptors

vasopressin receptor located in the kidney that causes water reabsorption in the collecting duct of the kidney

V1a receptors

vasopressin receptor that is located in blood vessels and causes vasoconstriction of blood vessels to maintain BP

Types of Diabetes Insipidus (DI)

1. Central Diabetes Insipidus 2. Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus 3. Gestational Diabetes Insipidus

TWO types of Primary Polydipsia

1. Dipsogenic DI 2. Psychogenic DI

mechanisms that stimulate Vasopressin production/secretion

1. Hyperosmolarity 2. decreased atrial receptor firing 3. Angiotensin II 4. Sympathetic stimulation

Hypovolemic manifestations

1. Orthostatic dizziness 2. Tachycardia 3. Hypotension 4. Syncope 5. loss of consciousness 6. death

Disorders causing Polyuria

1. Osmotic Diuresis 2. Diabetes Insipidus (DI) 3. Primary Polydipsia 4. Osmoreceptor Dysfunction

TWO major components of body fluid homeostasis

1. Osmotic homeostasis 2. Volume Homeostasis

AVP

"Arginine-Vasopressin" produced in Hypothalamus (SON and PVN) and secreted from the posterior pituitary acts on the kidney (both a neural and renal response)

Diabetes meaning

"passing water like a siphon"

mellitus meaning

"sweetened with honey"

insipidus meaning

"without taste"

mechanisms to preserve osmotic homeostasis during hyperosmolarity and dehydration

1. AVP secretion 2. Thirst

BUN

Blood Urea Nitrogen can cross cell membrane feely in order to equalize its concentrations between the intracellular and extracellular compartment

Is Diabetes Mellitus or Diabetes Insipidus more prevalent?

Diabetes mellitus is more prevalent affects 1.6% of the population for ages 20-39 affects 19.3% of the population for ages 75+

Why are pituitary lesions not sufficient enough to cause DI?

Vasopressin is produced in the hypothalamus and travels to the posterior pituitary for secretion lesions on the posterior pituitary will cause decreased release of Vasopressin but will not impact its synthesis

polyuria

abnormal production of large amounts of dilute urine

polydipsia

abnormal thirst resulting in excessive fluid intake

prevalence of Diabetes Insipidus

affects 1 in 10-15,000 people number of cases is less than 0.1% of Diabetes mellitus cases has not increases in incidence over the last 50 years

When do many Central DI cases occur?

after neurosurgery = neurons can be damaged around the base of the brain

DDAVP

analog of AVP with 2 different modifications: 1. D-Arg at position 8 (instead of L-Arg in AVP) 2. amino group is removed from the amino terminal end

Treatment for DI

antidiuretic agents (AVP or DDVAP)

normal pituitary on a MRI

appears as a bright spot

Why do most patients with DI not present with hypovolemia or hyperosmolar manifestations

because of their intact thirst mechanism

Why did the patient crave cold water?

cold water relieves thirst much better/faster than warm or room-temp water

if a patient was given AVP and their polyuria did not improve?

consider Nephrogenic DI as cause (problem with AVP receptor V2) not with AVP production

Osmoreceptor dysfunction

damage to osmoreceptors in the hypothalamus that stimulate AVP production results in Diabetes Insipidus (DI) and a lack of thirst patients reach hyperosmolality quickly and are difficult to control

urine osmolality (Uosm) >600 mOsm

effectively eliminates a diagnosis of DI in most cases

urine osmolality (Uosm) >800 mOsm

eliminates a diagnosis of DI


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