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Diabetes Insipidus

Endocrinology

Endocrinology

Introduction

Diabetes Insipidus (DI) is a condition characterised by the passage of large volumes (>3L/day) of dilute urine due to impaired water resorption by the kidney, because of reduced ADH secretion from the posterior pituitary (cranial DI) or impaired response of the kidney to ADH (nephrogenic DI).

It is important to distinguish diabetes insipidus from primary polydipsia, which is a psychiatric condition characterised by excessive water consumption. Other causes of polyuria and polydipsia, such as hyperglycaemia, are not to be confused with DI.

In health, ADH acts to increase the volume of blood intravascularly, and also to decrease the volume of urine produced. Therefore, a lack of it causes increased urine production and internal volume depletion.

 

Symptoms

N.B.
Other causes of hypernatraemia:
Water loss in excess of sodium loss…

 

Aetiology

Cranial DI Nephrogenic DI
  • Disease of the hypothalamus
  • Neurosurgery
  • Trauma
  • Primary/ secondary tumours
  • Infiltrative disease (sarcoidosis, histiocytosis)
  • Idiopathic
  • Hypokalaemia
  • Hypercalcaemia
  • Drugs: lithium chloride, dimeclocycline, glibenclamide
  • Renal tubular acidosis
  • Sickle cell disease
  • Prolonged polyuria of any cause
  • Familial (mutation in ADH receptors)

N.B.
Damage to the hypothalamo-neurohypophysial tract or the posterior pituitary with an intact hypothalamus does not lead to ADH deficiency, and therefore does not cause CDI. This is because ADH is still able to ‘leak’ from the damaged end of the intact neurone.

Neurogenic Causes

 

Nephrogenic Causes

 

Differential Diagnoses

 

Investigations

 

Diagnosis

The 8 Hour Water Deprivation Test
This test is indicated for polyiuric patients with normal blood glucose and serum electrolytes, to determine whether diabetes insipidus accounts for their problems.

Stage 1

Stage 2

This diagnostic investigation should be stopped if the patient loses >3% bodyweight, as this indicates significant and dehydration.

Interpretation of results
Normal

Primary polydipsia

Cranial DI

Nephrogenic DI

 

Treatment

Cranial DI

Nephrogenic DI

Emergency management

References

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