| Literature DB >> 31620086 |
Rinkoo Dalan1,2,3, Hanxin Chin1, Jeremy Hoe1, Abel Chen1, Huiling Tan4, Bernhard Otto Boehm1,2, Karen SuiGeok Chua5.
Abstract
Adipsic Diabetes Insipidus is a rare hypothalamic disorder characterized by a loss of thirst in response to hypernatraemia accompanied by diabetes insipidus. These occur secondary to a congregation of defects in the homeostatic mechanisms of water balance. A 27-year old Chinese female presented with Adipsic Diabetes Insipidus after cerebral arteriovenous malformation (AVM) surgery. Initial diagnosis and management was extremely challenging. Long term management required a careful interplay between low dose vasopressin analog treatment and fluids. Detailed charts of medication and sodium balance are described in the case presentation. We performed a literature search of similarly reported cases and describe the possible pathogenesis, etiology, clinical presentation, acute and chronic management, and prognosis.Entities:
Keywords: adipsia; diabetes insipidus; hypothalamus and neuroendocrinology; thirst and drinking; water balance
Year: 2019 PMID: 31620086 PMCID: PMC6759785 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2019.00630
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Graph showing all serial measurements in our patient throughout the hospitalization.
Figure 2Schematic representation of fluid balance regulation in humans. (A) The control and regulation of vasopressin secretion in the brain. (A) Peripheral signals (oropharyngeal, gut osmosensors, blood osmolality) encode information about the current state of hydration in real time (1) and centrally integrated (2). A state of dehydration leads to stimulatory signals to the SFO which hierarchically sends signals to the OVLT and the MnPO (3). The MnPO which may serve as a “central detector” sends stimulatory signals to the hypothalamic nuclei to increase release of vasopressin (4), and also sends increased thirst signal through the SFO, and OVLT (5, blue circuit in the diagram). On the contrary in the state of adequate hydration signals from the peripheral sensors, there is an inhibition of these areas and negative feedback from MnPO leading to suppression of thirst and lower vasopressin secretion and release (red circuit 6). The thirst related neural pathways connecting the SFO and OVLT to the cingulate and insular cortex results in the conscious perception of thirst (7). In adipsic DI, in the absence of osmosensory stimuli associated neural circuits due to cell damage, stimulatory release, or inhibition of vasopressin and the conscious perception of thirst both are disrupted. (B) The mechanism of action of vasopressin on the renal collecting tubules. (B) Vasopressin in the blood circulation attaches to Vasopressin receptor 2 on the luminal surface of the principal cells of the distal collecting tubule in the kidneys (1). In the acute phase, via synthesis of cAMP from ATP through AC (adenylate cyclase) it forms protein kinase A (2) which stimulates the translocation of aquaporin from the storage vesicle to the apical membrane and blood luminal surface (3). This results in water being transported into the cell (4) and absorbed subsequently into the circulation (5). In the chronic phase, via cAMP mediated transcriptional control of the aquaporin gene (6) increased levels of the aquaporin water channel can be found in the principal cells (7). In adipsic DI, the acute response is likely to be more affected than the chronic response as the osmosensory related vasopressin secretion is affected.
Demographics, etiology, clinical presentation, management, and prognosis of patients with adipsic diabetes insipidus reported in the literature.
| 1 | Cuesta et al. ( | 51/Male | ACOM aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | Acute polyuria after surgery | Oral DDAVP dose 200 mcg thrice daily | Hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism and Secondary Hypothyroidism | Recovered after 10 years |
| 2 | Imai et al. ( | 38/Male | ACOM aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | Acute polyuria after surgery | Intranasal DDAVP 30 mcg/day | Not known | Remission after 1 year |
| 3 | McIver et al. ( | 39/Female | ACOM aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | Acute polyuria after surgery | Intranasal DDAVP twice daily | Not reported | No |
| 4 | McIver et al. ( | 30/Male | ACOM aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | Acute polyuria after surgery | Intranasal DDAVP twice daily | Not reported | Not reported |
| 5 | Ball et al. ( | 28/Male | ACOM aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | Chronic presentations with abnormal sodium and loss of thirst. | Only required fluids with no DDAVP | Normal | Not reported |
| 6 | Nguyen et al. ( | 46/Male | ACOM Aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | 10 days after operation sodium found to be high at 167 mmol/L | Intranasal DDAVP 20 mcg twice daily, chlorpropamide 250 mg and Hydrochloro-thiazide | Normal | Not Reported |
| 7 | Smith et al. ( | 39/Female | ACOM aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | Acute polyuria after surgery | Not reported | None | Not reported |
| 8 | Smith et al. ( | 30/Male | ACOM aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | Acute polyuria after surgery | Not reported | None | Not reported |
| 9 | Smith et al. ( | 28/Male | ACOM aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | Acute polyuria after surgery | Not reported | None | Not reported |
| 10 | Smith et al. ( | 40/Male | ACOM aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | Acute polyuria after surgery | Not reported | None | Not reported |
| 11 | Nussey et al. ( | 30/ Male | ACOM aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | Acute polyuria after surgery | Not reported | Thermoregulatory disturbances and hypothermia | Not reported |
| 12 | Spiro and Jenkins ( | 52/Female | ACOM aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | Acute polyuria after surgery | Not reported | Thermoregulatory disturbances and hypothermia | None |
| 13 | Crowley et al. ( | Case Series of 13 patients: 8/13 Males Age: 16–56 years | ACOM aneurysm (n-4), craniopharyngioma (n-4), brain trauma (n-1), Toluene (n-1), neurosarcoidosis (n-1), pituitary tumor (n-1), and congential (n-1) | Depending on pathology | Acute polyuria after surgery for postoperative and trauma cases. | Not reported | 8 patients had Panhypopituitarism | No remission Demise due to respiratory failure (3/13 died) |
| 14 | Cuesta et al. ( | 41/Female | Craniophayrngioma and Left Para arachnoid Aneurysm | Surgical Repair of aneurysm | Acute polyuria after surgery | DDAVP dose 200 mcg twice daily | Panhypopituitarism | Adipsia recovered in 2 years but DI persisted |
| 15 | Cuesta et al. ( | 29/Female | Craniopharyngioma | Surgical excision with complicated subdural hematoma and cerebral shunt insertion | Acute polyuria after surgery | Oral DDAVP 200 mcg thrice daily | Panhypopituitarism requiring cortisol, | Progressed to compulsive water drinking after 8 years |
| 16 | Colleran et al. ( | 18/Male | Craniopharyngioma | Surgical treatment | Presentation is 5 years after initial surgery | IV DDAVP 1 mcg twice daily | Panhypopituitarism | No, obesity |
| 17 | Zantut-Wittmann et al. ( | 34/Male | craniopharyngioma | Transfrontal resection | Acute polyuria after surgery | DDAVP 30 mcg IN along with regular fluids more than 2 L /day | Normal | Not reported |
| 18 | Raghunathan et al. ( | 11/Male | Craniopharyngioma | Transfrontal excision | Acute polyuria after surgery | DDAVP 10 μg puff IN every 24–36 h upon breakthrough with 1.2–1.5 L fluids | Panhypopituitarism | Not Reported |
| 19 | Smith et al. ( | 18/Female | Craniopharyngioma | Surgery | Acute polyuria after surgery | Not reported | Panhypopituitarism | Not reported |
| 20 | Smith et al. ( | 16/Female | Craniopharyngioma | Surgery | Acute polyuria after surgery | Not reported | Panhypopituitarism | Not reported |
| 21 | Smith et al. ( | 56/Male | Craniopharyngioma | Surgery | Acute polyuria after surgery | Not reported | Panhypopituitarism | Not reported |
| 22 | Sinha et al. ( | 15/Male | Craniopharyngioma | Surgical Resection | Acute polyuria after surgery | Not reported | Panhypopituitarism | Remission in 7 months |
| 23 | Sinha et al. ( | 13/Male | Craniopharyngioma | Surgical Resection | Acute polyuria after surgery | Not reported | Panhypopituitarism | Remission d in 9 months |
| 24 | Sinha et al. ( | 11/Male | Craniopharyngioma | Surgical Resection | Acute polyuria after surgery | Not reported | Panhypopituitarism | Remission in 4 months |
| 25 | Sinha et al. ( | 11/Male | Cavernous haemangioma with intracranial hemorrhage | Stereotactic radiotherapy to the angioma | Polyuria with loss of thirst | DDAVP 100 mcg twice daily orally | Radiation induced encephalopathy and visual failure | Not reported |
| 26 | Pérez et al. ( | 24/Female | Craniopharyngioma | Transcranial surgery | Polyuria after surgery | DDAVP melts 60 mcg om and 120 mcg on | Panhypopituitarism | Not Reported |
| 27 | Pabich et al. ( | 16/Female | Craniopharyngioma | Transsphenoidal surgery | Polyuria and adipsia after surgery | SC DDAVP 1 mcg twice daily | Panhypopituitarism | Not reported |
| 28 | Pereira et al. ( | 13/Female | Germinal Cell tumor of the hypothalamus | Radiotherapy | 6 months after RT | DDAVP sublingual, 0.72 mcg/day | Panhypopituitarism | no |
| 29 | Sinha et al. ( | 15/Male | Pineal tumor extending into the third ventricle and infiltrating along the walls of the lateral ventricle | Radiotherapy to the entire neuroaxis | First presented with adipsic polyuria | Fixed dose of DDAVP and sliding scale fluids | Panhypopituitarism | Not reported |
| 30 | Zhang et al. ( | 16/Male | Hypothalamic hamartoma. | Surgery | Chronic -presented 10 years after surgery | DDAVP 0.05 mg (50 mcg) orally every 12 h | Normal | Not reported |
| 31 | Latcha et al. ( | 37/Female | H/o hepatocellular Carcinoma with metastasis to hypothalamus. MRI showed enhancing mass centered upon the supra sellar cistern and anterior third ventricle measuring 3.0 × 3.9 × 3.4 cm. | No treatment reported | Chronic presentation | DDAVP oral 50 mcg 2 times a day, | Normal | Not Reported |
| 32 | Sherlock et al. ( | 14/Male | Macroprolactinoma | massive intraoperative hemorrhage during three resection surgeries | Acute polyuria after surgery | Oral DDAVP 200 mcg twice daily with 2 L fluids. | Panhypopituitarism | Not reported |
| 33 | Ball et al. ( | 14/Female | Null cell pituitary tumor (aggressive) recurrent (2nd time) | Transfrontal adenomectomy | Acute polyuria after surgery | DDAVP 250 mcg twice daily SC | Panhypopituitarism | Demise due to large malignant pituitary tumor |
| 34 | Smith et al. ( | 22/Male | Head injury | Acute polyuria | Not reported | None | Not reported | |
| 35 | Smith et al. ( | 26/Male | Toluene Exposure | Episodes of Adipsic DI | Not reported | None | Not reported | |
| 36 | Hiyama et al. ( | 6.5/Female | Retroperitonial ganglioneuroma not related as no resolution after resection with no structural abnormality in the hypothalamus/pituitary | Found to autoantibodies to Nax which were also expressed on the tumor cells. These antibodies were seen to react with the circumventricular organs in mice and was postulated to be the cause | Chronic presentation | Controlled Fluids intake only. Did not require DDAVP | None | Not reported |
| 37 | Hiyama et al. ( | 9/Female | No structural abnormality in the hypothalamus –pituitary h/o influenza | Found to have antibodies that reacted to mouse SFO (subfornical organ) | Polyuria with absence of thirst | DDAVP and fluids | None | None |
| 38 | Hiyama et al. ( | 16/Female | Background opsoclonus myoclonus syndrome No structural lesion of the hypothalamus pituitary region | Found to have antibodies that reacted to mouse SFO (subfornical organ) | Polyuria with absence of thirst | DDAVP and fluids | None | None |
| 39 | Hiyama et al. ( | 8/Female | No structural lesion of the hypothalamus pituitary region | Found to have antibodies that reacted to mouse SFO (subfornical organ) and to OVLT | Polyuria with absence of thirst | DDAVP and fluids | None | None |
| 40 | Komatsu et al. ( | 16/Male | Developmental delay and mental retardation, | Found to have hypogenesis of corpus callosum | Polyuria with absence of thirst | DDAVP and fluids | Hypothalamic hypogonadism | None |
| 41 | Schaff-Blass et al. ( | 8months/Male | Developmental Delay and microcephaly, | Dysplastic Corpus callosum and dysplastic septum pellucidum | Polyuria with absence of thirst | DDAVP and fluids | Hypothalamic hypogonadism and hypothyroidism | None |
| 42 | AvRuskin et al. ( | 11/Male | Developmental Delay and microcephaly | Agenesis of Corpus Callosum and dilated ventricles | Polyuria with absence of thirst | DDAVP and fluids | None | None |
| 43 | Radetti et al. ( | 4 months Female (2 sisters) | Developmental Delay and microcephaly, West syndrome | Dysplastic Corpus callosum and dysplastic septum pellucidum | Polyuria with absence of thirst | DDAVP and fluids | None | None |
| 44 | Takeya et al. ( | 13/Female | Short Stature, Cerebral palsy | Agenesis of Corpus Callosum | Polyuria with absence of thirst | DDAVP and fluids | None | None |
| 45 | O'Reilly et al. ( | 22/Male | Neurosarcoidosis | Infliximab | Polyuria and subsequent loss of thirst | DDAVP and fluids | Panhypopituitarism | Complete recovery after Infliximab |
| 46 | Our case | 27/Female | Arteriovenous malformation | Surgery with postoperative ventricular shunt insertion | Polyuria in the immediate postoperative period | DDAVP melts and fluids | None | None |
ACOM, anterior communicating artery aneurysm; DDAVP, Desmopressin.