| Literature DB >> 22325688 |
Clement C Cheung1, Melissa A Cadnapaphornchai, Sayali A Ranadive, Stephen E Gitelman, Stephen M Rosenthal.
Abstract
Nephrogenic Syndrome of Inappropriate Antidiuresis (NSIAD) is a novel disease caused by a gain-of-function mutation in the V2 vasopressin receptor (V2R), which results in water overload and hyponatremia. We report the effect of water loading in a 3-year old boy with NSIAD, diagnosed in infancy, to assess urine aquaporin-2 (AQP2) excretion as a marker for V2R activation, and to evaluate the progression of the disease since diagnosis. The patient is one of the first known NSIAD patients and the only patient with a R137L mutation. Patient underwent a standard water loading test in which serum and urine sodium and osmolality, serum AVP, and urine AQP2 excretion were measured. The patient was also evaluated for ad lib fluid intake before and after the test. This patient demonstrated persistent inability to excrete free water. Only 39% of the water load (20 ml/kg) was excreted during a 4-hour period (normal ≥ 80-90%). Concurrently, the patient developed hyponatremia and serum hypoosmolality. Serum AVP levels were detectable at baseline and decreased one hour after water loading; however, urine AQP2 levels were elevated and did not suppress normally during the water load. The patient remained eunatremic but relatively hypodipsic during ad lib intake. In conclusion, this is the first demonstration in a patient with NSIAD caused by a R137L mutation in the V2R that urine AQP2 excretion is inappropriately elevated and does not suppress normally with water loading. In addition, this is the first longitudinal report of a pediatric patient with NSIAD diagnosed in infancy who demonstrates the ability to maintain eunatremia during ad lib dietary intake.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22325688 PMCID: PMC3299583 DOI: 10.1186/1687-9856-2012-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr Endocrinol ISSN: 1687-9848
Serum sodium (Na) concentration, serum osmolality (Osm), serum AVP, and urine osmolality from initial evaluation at 2.5 months to 3 years of age
| Age | Events | Serum Na | Serum Osm | Serum AVP | Urine Osm |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2.5 m | Initial presentation | 118 | 247 | < 1 | 390 |
| 5.5 m | After 1 month of water restriction and urea | 142 | 295 | 5.5 | n/a* |
| 3 yr | Off urea for > 6 months; | 139 | 295 | 3.1 | 628 |
*n/a = not available
Serum sodium, serum osmolality, and urine osmolality during standard water loading test (20 mL/kg) at 3 years of age
| Water Loading Test | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| -60 | 135 | 283 | 857 |
| +60 | 128 | 272 | 709 |
| +120 | 128 | 266 | 753 |
| +180 | 128 | 268 | 842 |
| +240 | 127 | 267 | 884 |
Figure 1Western immunoblot showing urine AQP2 excretion from 60 minutes prior to 240 minutes following oral water load. AQP2-BSA standards included 50, 100, 150, and 200 ng.
Figure 2Quantitative assessment of nonglycosylated AQP2 excretion in pmol/mg creatinine from 60 minutes prior to 240 minutes following oral water load. Sample values for the patient were corrected for urinary creatinine.
Figure 3Standard curve for urine AQP2-BSA measurement. The y-axis represents densitometry measurement and the x-axis represents the corresponding nanogram value for AQP2-BSA.