Advanced search×

Role of vasopressin in abnormal water excretion in cirrhotic patients.

Ann Intern Med 96(4):413-7 (1982) PMID 7065556

Twelve stable cirrhotic patients with ascites received a 20 mL/kg water load. Seven patients had abnormal water excretion (27.3% +/- 5.4% of the water load in 5 hours) and a minimal urine osmolality of 262 mosmol/kg water. Five patients excreted 82.6% in 5 hours and had a minimal urine osmolality of 65 mosmol/kg water. Mean plasma arginine vasopressin values after water load were significantly higher in Group 1 (1.34 +/- 0.36 pg/mL) than in Group 2 (undetectable). An effective blood volume lower in Group 1 than Group 2 patients was suggested by a lower plasma albumin (2.5 versus 3.3 g/dL, p less than 0.02), a higher pulse rate (96 versus 72, p less than 0.001), a higher plasma renin activity (7.8 versus 1.5 ng/mL . h, p less than 0.005), a higher plasma aldosterone (66 versus 21 ng/dL, p less than 0.05), and a lower urinary sodium excretion (2.7 versus 14.2 meq Na/5 h, p less than 0.005). The results suggest that nonosmotic stimulation of vasopressin secondary to a decrease in effective blood volume is an important factor in the abnormal water excretion of cirrhosis.

Referenced by 1 articles

Version: za2963e q8za1 q8zbf q8zcc q8zd4 q8ze6 q8zf2 q8zgb

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. Gas exchange mechanism of orthodeoxia in hepatopulmonary syndrome.

    Hepatology 40(3):660-6 (2004) PMID 15349905

    We therefore investigated the intrapulmonary (shunt and ventilation-perfusion [VA/Q] mismatching) and extrapulmonary factors governing PaO2 in 20 patients with mild to severe HPS (14 males, 6 females; 50 +/- 3 years old SE) at upright and supine, in random order. We set out a cutoff value for OD, na...
  2. The hepatopulmonary syndrome: new name, old complexities.

    Thorax 47(11):897-902 (1992) PMID 1465744

    We propose a set of four diagnostic criteria for the hepatopulmonary syndrome: 1. presence of chronic hepatic disease (alcoholic, postnecrotic, or primary biliary cirrhosis or active chronic hepatitis)--severe liver dysfunction may not be mandatory; 2. absence of intrinsic cardiopulmonary disease, w...
  3. Hepatopulmonary syndrome: monitoring at your fingertip.

    Dig Dis Sci 56(6):1599-600 (2011) PMID 21448697