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  • Title: Chronic hypernatremia, hypovolemia and partial hypopituitarism in sarcoidosis: a case report.
    Author: Luciani JC, Conte-Devolx B, Fourcade JC, Barjon P.
    Journal: Clin Nephrol; 1980 May; 13(5):242-7. PubMed ID: 6994962.
    Abstract:
    A syndrome of chronic hypernatremia (range 148 to 161 mmoles/l) and partial hypopituitarism (growth hormone and gonadotropin deficiencies) is reported in a 27 year-old man with sarcoid hypothalamic involvement. The patient did not complain of thirst and spontaneous fluid intake was not sufficient to restore the serum sodium to normal. However, when larger amounts of water were given (50 ml/kg for 180 min), the plasma osmolality returned to normal values in 3 hours. Blood volume values were found subnormal on two occasions on free diet (63 and 74% of the theorical normal values) and plasma renin activity was elevated (22 ng/ml/hour). Plasma vasopressin (AVP) concentrations (range < 1 to 1.9 pg/ml) were inappropriately low for the degree of plasma osmolality and remained markedly subnormal when hypertonic saline was infused (NaCl 5%, 10 ml/min for 60 min). However, the secretory stores and hemodynamic control of AVP release were intact since a rise in plasma AVP to 10.8 pg/ml was observed after induction of arterial hypotension with sodium nitroprusside infusion. These results provide further direct evidence fo the dysfunction of the thirst mechanism and the osmotic contol of AVP release. They support the concept that osmoreceptor areas are anatomically distinct from the neurohypophyseal AVP secretory system and that neural inputs from baroreceptor and osmoreceptor cells are completely separated.
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