1944
DOI: 10.1001/archinte.1944.00210200002001
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Diabetes Insipidus

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1948
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Cited by 28 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The hypertonic saline test performed 24 hours after the cessation of cortisone therapy did not have any antidiuretic action, which is good evidence of the existence of diabetes insipidus. Tre?tment with pitressin (Jones, 1944) controlled the polyuria until cortisone therapy was reinstituted, when this previously adequate dosage of pitressin was unable to prevent the polyuria.…”
Section: Treatment and Progressmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The hypertonic saline test performed 24 hours after the cessation of cortisone therapy did not have any antidiuretic action, which is good evidence of the existence of diabetes insipidus. Tre?tment with pitressin (Jones, 1944) controlled the polyuria until cortisone therapy was reinstituted, when this previously adequate dosage of pitressin was unable to prevent the polyuria.…”
Section: Treatment and Progressmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rabinowitch (1921) found one case of diabetes insipidus* among fifty thousand admissions to a general hospital. In only two of fifty-six cases reported by Rowntree-(1924) and two, or possibly three, of forty-two cases reported by Jones (1944) was the diabetes insipidus due to head injury. Rand and Patterson (1937) have stressed the rarity of posttraumatic diabetes insipidus by stating that no case occurred in one hundred and fifty thousand admissions to a neurosurgical unit.…”
mentioning
confidence: 93%