| Literature DB >> 28553553 |
Manish Raisingani1, Resmy Palliyil Gopi1, Bina Shah1.
Abstract
Management of central diabetes insipidus in infancy is challenging. The various forms of desmopressin, oral, subcutaneous, and intranasal, have variability in the duration of action. Infants consume most of their calories as liquids which with desmopressin puts them at risk for hyponatremia and seizures. There are few cases reporting chlorothiazide as a temporizing measure for central diabetes insipidus in infancy. A male infant presented on day of life 30 with holoprosencephaly, cleft lip and palate, and poor weight gain to endocrine clinic. Biochemical tests and urine output were consistent with central diabetes insipidus. The patient required approximately 2.5 times the normal fluid intake to keep up with the urine output. Patient was started on low renal solute load formula and oral chlorothiazide. There were normalization of serum sodium, decrease in fluid intake close to 1.3 times the normal, and improved urine output. There were no episodes of hyponatremia/hypernatremia inpatient. The patient had 2 episodes of hypernatremia in the first year of life resolving with few hours of hydration. Oral chlorothiazide is a potential bridging agent for treatment of central DI along with low renal solute load formula in early infancy. It can help achieve adequate control of DI without wide serum sodium fluctuations.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28553553 PMCID: PMC5434263 DOI: 10.1155/2017/2407028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Pediatr
Figure 1Serum sodium levels and urine output during hospitalization. CTZ: chlorothiazide; LRSL: low renal solute load formula.
Summary of cases of central diabetes insipidus in infancy.
| Author | Age at diagnosis in days | Cause of DI | Treatment | Age at transition in months to DDAVP | Complications | Number of hyponatremia episodes | Number of hypernatremia episodes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rivkees et al., 5 infants | Early infancy | N/A | BM or LRSL + free water + CTZ | 6–18 | N/A | 0 | 1 episode |
| Abraham et al. | <7 | Septooptic dysplasia | LRSL + HCTZ | 12 | FTT | 0 | 0 |
| Abraham et al. | <7 | Septooptic dysplasia | LRSL + HCTZ | 3 | Acute gastroenteritis with low K, difficulty in maintaining sodium | 0 | 0 |
| Abraham et al. | <7 | Septooptic dysplasia | LRSL + HCTZ | 6 | Failure to thrive | 0 | 0 |
| Abraham et al. | <7 | Holoprosencephaly | LRSL + HCTZ | 12 | FTT, hypernatremia | 0 | 0 |
| Chaudhary et al. | 10 | Holoprosencephaly | Dilution of formula + HCTZ | N/A | N/A | 0 | 0 |
| Pogacar et al., 6 infants | Early infancy | Holoprosencephaly | DDAVP: intranasal, subcutaneous | N/A | 3 infants hospitalized for hypo- or hypernatremia, 1 death due to hyponatremic seizure | At least 5 | At least 3 |
| Blanco et al., 10 infants | Infancy | Septooptic dysplasia, holoprosencephaly, congenital nasal piriform sinus stenosis, group Β streptococcal meningitis, and congenital diabetes insipidus | DDAVP: intranasal, 4 patients | N/A | N/A | 9 out of 10 patients had hyponatremia | Inpatient, 9 episodes; outpatient, 5 episodes |
| Yarber et al. | <7 days | NA | DDAVP: subcutaneous | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Rivas-Crespo et al. | 28 days | Neonatal hemorrhagic shock | Subcutaneous + intranasal | N/A | Central myelinolysis at age 3 due to poor absorption of intranasal DDAVP | N/A | Multiple hypernatremia on intranasal DDAVP |
DDAVP: desmopressin, FTT: failure to thrive, BM: breast milk, LRSL: low renal solute load formula, CTZ: chlorothiazide, HCTZ: hydrochlorothiazide, and N/A: not available.