| Literature DB >> 21603106 |
Adam Romanovsky1, Sean Bagshaw, Mitchell H Rosner.
Abstract
Heart failure is one of the most common chronic medical conditions in the developed world. It is characterized by neurohormonal activation of multiple systems that can lead to clinical deterioration and significant morbidity and mortality. In this regard, hyponatremia is due to inappropriate and continued vasopressin activity despite hypoosmolality and volume overload. Hyponatremia is also due to diuretic use in an attempt to manage volume overload. When hyponatremia occurs, it is a marker of heart failure severity and identifies patients with increased mortality. The recent introduction of specific vasopressin-receptor antagonists offers a targeted pharmacological approach to these pathophysiological derangements. Thus far, clinical trials with vasopressin-receptor antagonists have demonstrated an increase in free-water excretion, improvement in serum sodium, modest improvements in dyspnea but no improvement in mortality. Continued clinical trials with these agents are needed to determine their specific role in the treatment of both chronic and decompensated heart failure.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21603106 PMCID: PMC3097052 DOI: 10.4061/2011/732746
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nephrol
The actions of vasopressin and its receptors.
| Receptor | Location | Action |
|---|---|---|
| V1a | Vascular smooth muscle | Vasoconstriction |
| Myocardial hypertrophy | ||
| Platelets | Aggregation | |
| Myometrium | Uterine contraction | |
| V1b | Anterior pituitary | Adrenocorticotropin hormone release |
| V2 | Renal collecting tubule | Induction of aquaporin-2 |
| Free water absorption | ||
| Vascular endothelium | Release of von Willebrand factor | |
| Release of factor VIII | ||