Plasma antidiuretic hormone (ADH), PRA, plasma osmolality, and the parameters of renal water excretion were measured after overnight dehydration and for 5 h after an oral load in 14 patients with congestive heart failure (CHF) treated with diuretics (group 1), 8 hypertensive patients without CHF also treated with diuretics (group 2), and 11 patients with coronary artery disease but without CHF who were not treated with diuretics (group 3). Under basal conditions, mean plasma osmolality was lower in group 1 than in group 3, but was not different in groups 1 and 2. Mean plasma ADH was higher in group 1 than in group 2 or 3. In response to the water load, plasma osmolality and plasma ADH levels decreased in the 3 groups. ADH levels remained significantly greater in group 1 than in groups 2 and 3 from 2-4 h after the water load despite more marked hypoosmolality in group 1 compared with that in either of the 2 control groups. Plasma ADH was significantly correlated with plasma osmolality only in the 2 control groups. Mean PRA was greater in patients with CHF and patients without CHF treated with diuretics than in untreated patients. Cumulative water excretion was lower in patients with CHF than in patients in the 2 control groups from 2-5 h after the water load. At 5 h, the mean percentage excretion of the ingested loads was 56.8%, 90.7%, and 91.2% in the patients of groups 1, 2, and 3 respectively. Free water clearance was lower and minimal urinary osmolality was greater in the patients with CHF than in those in the 2 control groups. Two patients with CHF, who excreted more than 75% of the water load, also had low plasma basal ADH levels. These data show that patients with CHF have an inappropriate response of plasma ADH to a marked fall in plasma osmolality. This disorder is not due to the diuretic therapy, since hypertensive patients treated with diuretics behaved similarly to untreated patients without CHF. The reasons for this inappropriate response of plasma ADH during a water load in patients with CHF are probably multifactorial.
Urinary clearance of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) has been measured under basal conditions and during intravenous administration of arginine vasopressin in ten healthy subjects, and only under basal conditions in 18 patients with chronic renal failure and seven patients with acute renal failure at the polyuric phase of the disease. In healthy subjects studied under conditions of mild water diuresis plasma concentration, urinary excretion rate, urinary clearance and fractional clearance of ADH were 3.3 +/- 0.36 pg/ml, 25.2 +/- 5.5 pg/min, 7.5 +/- 1.2 ml/min and 6.4 +/- 1.0% (means +/- SEM) respectively. When plasma ADH was raised to levels between 7 and 26 pg/ml during intravenous administration of the hormone, urinary excretion rate and urinary clearance of ADH increased. Tubular reabsorption of ADH did not reach a plateau but progressively increased in the range of plasma ADH studied. In patients with chronic renal failure, plasma concentration, urinary excretion rate, urinary clearance and fractional clearance of ADH were 2.8 +/- 0.19 pg/ml, 9.4 +/- 2.0 pg/min, 3.4 +/- 0.6 ml/min and 10.0 +/- 2.9% (means +/- SEM) respectively. Urinary excretion rate and urinary clearance were significantly lower than in healthy subjects. In patients with acute renal failure, plasma concentration, urinary excretion rate, urinary clearance and fractional clearance of ADH were 4.6 +/- 0.47 pg/ml, 52.8 +/- 15.8 pg/min, 9.5 +/- 2.7 ml/min and 24.9 +/- 4.4% (means +/- SEM) respectively. Urinary excretion rate and fractional clearance were higher than in healthy subjects and patients with chronic renal failure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Thirty-three insulin-dependent diabetic patients were separated into two groups from the results of three different tests for cardiac vagal neuropathy: heart rate response to deep breathing, Valsalva manoeuvre and heart rate response to postural change. Seventeen patients were considered as without ('intact' patients) and 16 as with ('denervated' patients) cardiac autonomic dysfunction. One patient with a transplanted heart was also studied. Plasma antidiuretic hormone (ADH), plasma aldosterone and plasma renin activity (PRA) were measured immediately before and 60 min after intravenous administration of frusemide and passage from lying to standing. The kinetics of hormonal responses were analysed more precisely (five blood collections) in six patients of each group who were studied again. Heart rate and blood pressure were recorded before each blood collection. Volume depletion estimated from the rise in plasma protein (+ 11.9 and + 12.2% in 'denervated' and 'intact' patients respectively) and heart rate response (+ 1.06 and + 14.7%) were similar in both groups. Mean blood pressure was unchanged in the 'intact' patients whereas it fell in the 'denervated' patients (-13.5%). PRA (+ 161.5 and + 231.2% in 'denervated' and 'intact' patients respectively) and plasma aldosterone (+ 318.2 and 279%) increased in both groups whereas plasma ADH was stimulated only in 'intact' patients (+ 55.3%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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