Diabetes Insipidus Flashcards
Describe the process of storage and release of vasopressin. Include the pathway of release and organ involvement
- Pre-pro-vasopressin is produced within the hypothalamus
- The signal peptide is cleaved and pro-vasopressin is transported to the endoplasmic reticulum
- The pro-hormone is transported via the hypothalamic-neurohypophyseal tract to be stored within the posterior pituitary gland
- During transport and storage, pro-vasopressin is cleaved into the constituent peptides:
- ADH / vasopressin
- Neurophysin 2 - necessary for correct cleavage and to prevent enzymatic degradation
- Copeptin (Glycoprotein) - role unknown
Note the factors that cause stimulation of vasopressin release.
What provides inhibitory inputs to vasopressin release?
- The major stimulus for release is an increase in plasma osmolality
- Circumventricular organs act as osmoreceptors and can alter vasopressin release and directly affect thirst
- High pressure baroreceptors in the aortic arch and low pressure receptors in the atria can inhibit vasopressin release
- Acts via the glosopharyngeal and vagus nerves respectively
- Note: the half life of vasopressin is ~ 6 minutes, so after correction of osmolality, the plasma concentration drops quickly
- Other factors that can influence vasopressin release include:
- stress
- nausea
- pain
- structural brain disease
- drugs / medications
- hypoglycaemia
- Exercise
Describe the process by which ADH effects water resorption in the collecting duct
- Vasopressin binds to V2 receptors on the basolateral surface of the collecting duct epithelial cells within the kidney
- V2 binds activates G-protein pathways, increasing cAMP and activates protein kinase A
- This activation leads to binding of vasicles containing aquaporin 2 to the apical surface
- Increased expression of the aquaporin 2 receptor
- Increased passive movement of free water from the hypotonic lumen to the isotonic cortex or hypertonic medullary interstitium
Vasopressin’s primary function is considered the mediation of water resorption within the collection duct.
Describe the other functions of ADH on various target organs
- Release of vWF
- Stimulation of NO release into the circulation
- Increase concentrations of Factor VIII
- Smooth muscle contraction
- Via V1a receptors
- Glycogenolysis
- Augmentation of ACTH release
- V1b receptors in the anterior pituitary
- Release of catecholamine and insulin
- V1b receptors in the adrenal gland and pancreas
- Neurotransmitter within the brain - numerous effects
What are the potential causes of diabetes insipidus in dogs and cats?
- Central diabetes insipidus
- Lack of ADH production
- Congenital
- Head trauma (most common in cats)
- Post-surgery - hypophysectomy
- Neoplasia with posterior pituitary damage (most common in dogs
- Idiopathic, infection and inflammatory causes have been suggested
- Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
- Decreased action of AVP at the collecting duct
- Lack of or ineffective V2 receptors
- Likely to be the most common
- X-linked in people and a litter or Siberian Huskies (males affected)
- 10x less binding affinity between V2 and ADH
- Lack of aquaporin 2 channel expression
Describe the pathophysiology of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus in dogs.
- Nephrogenic diabetes is caused by decreased expression in the aquaporin 2 channel
- The decreased expression could be due to defects in the channel production
- Most commonly there is decreased expression of the channel due to abnormalities in the vinding of ADH to the V2 receptor
- V2 receptor mutations result in decreased ADH binding afinity
- Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus causes increase water loss from the kidney causing primary polyuria
- Secondary polydipsia occurs due to increased plasma osmolality
What are the common clinical signs of diabetes insipidus?
What are the pathophysiological causes for the potential neurological signs?
- Severe polyuria and polydipsia is the most common clinical sign
- Water may be ingested in preference to food leading to weight loss
- Excessive drinking may be followed by vomiting
- Nocturia and incontinence may occur secondary to the production of vast quantities of urine
- Neurological signs in association with DI is common in dogs - common secondary to neoplasia causing destruction or compression of the pituitary gland/hypothalamus
- Variations in access to water can cause neurological signs
- Water restriction - rapid hypertonic dehydration - osmotic demyelination
- Access to water after restriction - rapid change / decrease in osmolality can lead to cerebral oedema
- Other endocrine deficiencies may also be present with neoplasia
What abnormalities may be seen on routine clinicopathological testing in dogs or cats with diabetes insipidus?
- No abnormalites may be seen if water has not been restricted
- Low BUN due to medullary solute washout
- With water restriction, hyperosmolar dehydration
- Increase sodium and HCT +/- increased chloride
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- Increase sodium and HCT +/- increased chloride
What are the difficulties in differentiating central diabetes insipidus and primary polydipsia?
- The clinical signs and initial clinicopathological testing can be identical
- There are similarites in the pathophysiology of two conditions, with AVP release
- AVP is absent in CDI
- AVP is present, but regulation can be abnormal in PP
- People with PP have been shown to have altered rates and set points for AVP release
- Dogs with primary polydipsia should concentrate urine with a modified water deprivation test alone
Briefly describe the MWDT specifically noting the risks.
Why is the ADH response test more appropriate and at least as uesful?
- 3-5 days of slow and gradual water deprivation.
- Dry food only
- Water spread out over the day in small quantities
- Day 1: 120-150 ml/kg
- Day 2: 80-100 ml/kg
- Day 3: 60-80 ml/kg
- This should improve the medullary concentrating gradient
- Remove water - hospitalise - monitor body weight after emptying the bladder
- Measure USG, HCT, TP, sodium and urea
- Monitor above parameters q 1-2 hours
- After loss of 5% of body weight, administer desmopressin IV
- Recheck USG +/- HCT/TP q 30 minutes for 2 hours, then each hour for 8 hours.
Interpretation:
- Increase USG with water deprivvation alone - primary polydipsia
- Increase in USG after ADH - central diabetes insipidus
- No response to ADH - nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
Apart from the water deprivation test and desmopressin response test, how else can a potential diagnosis of DI be investigated?
- MRI of the pituitary
- Absence of a hyperintense signal in the sella turcica suggests absence of ADH
- Hyperintense signal reflects the phospholipid of the secretory granules within the neurohypophysis
- Measurement of serum copeptin
- Cleavage product of the pro-AVP molecule
- Not been assessed in dogs/cats, but useful in humans