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Sunrise Teaching 19/11/15 Elaine McKinley
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Clinical Scenario 5 yr old with polydipsia/polyuria and dilute urine/no glucosuria.
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Diabetes Insipidus (DI) Inappropriate passage of large volumes of dilute urine (<300mOsm/L). Due to either deficiency in ADH* (anti-diuretic hormone) production [cranial DI] or resistance to its actions at the kidney [nephrogenic DI]. *Also known as arginine vasopressin (AVP)
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Epidemiology The combined prevalence of cranial DI and nephrogenic DI combined is estimated at 1 in 25,000. Inherited causes account for approximately 1-2% of all cases of DI.
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Cranial DI Acquired: Idiopathic Tumours Intracranial surgery Head injury Infections Vascular Post-radiotherapy Inherited: Autosomal recessive combination of DI, diabetes mellitus, optic atrophy, deafness (DIDMOAD) - Wolfram syndrome Autosomal dominant mutations of vasopressin gene
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Nephrogenic DI Acquired: Idiopathic. Hypokalaemia Hypercalcaemia Chronic kidney disease Drugs: eg, lithium Renal tubular acidosis Post-obstructive uropathy Inherited: X-linked mutation in V2 ADH-receptor gene Autosomal recessive defect in aquaporin 2 (AQP2) gene – water channel in distal renal tubule Sporadic nephrogenic DI with mental retardation and intracerebral calcification (exceedingly rare)
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Gestational DI due to accelerated metabolism of ADH by placental production of cysteine aminopeptidases
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History Polyuria Polydipsia Chronic thirst Nocturia Urinary incontinence Secondary nocturnal enuresis Loss of appetite Fatigue
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History Young Children: Excessive, heavy wet nappies Excessive crying Irritability Failure to thrive/weight loss Hyperthermia
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History PMHx/Family hx to assess for Risk Factors– Cranial DI: Recent CNS infection, Pituitary surgery, craniopharyngioma, pituitary stalk lesions, traumatic head injury, congenital pituitary malformations, genetic mutations (Wolfram's syndrome), AVP-neurophysin gene mutations, and autoimmune disorders Nephrogenic DI: Use of lithium and AVP receptor pathway mutations
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General Examination Observations: Tachycardia Hypotension Hyperthermia Assess hydration status dry mucous membranes poor skin turgor ? shocked Rash Growth Parameters – ? thriving
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Examination Presence of intercurrent illness Neurological examination – muscle twitching hyper-reflexia visual field defects focal motor deficits sensorineural deafness
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Investigations
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Differential Diagnosis Psychogenic or primary polydipsia Diabetes mellitus Other osmotic diureses - eg, hypercalcaemia Diuretic abuse
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Primary polydipsia/Dipsogenic DI/ Psychogenic polydipsia Excessive/abnormal thirst, accompanied by intake of excessive quantities of water or fluid. Often seen in patients with severe mental illness and/or developmental disability. There may be no physical effects, but hyponatraemia can occur. Diagnosis of exclusion.
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Management Rehydration Treat underlying cause Desmopressin if Cranial DI Consider Sodium Restriction
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