Central diabetes insipidus
Diabetes insipidus (DI)
- is a condition caused by loss of the effect of antidiuretic hormone on the collecting ducts of the kidneys, resulting in loss of free water.
- diabetes insipidus can be
- central
- nephrogenic
- Normal physiology
- Vasopressin/antidiuretic hormone(ADH) is produced in the hypothalamus and travels along nerve fibers to the posterior pituitary, where it is stored and released
- Increased plasma osmolality stimulates release of ADH
- ADH promotes reabsorption of water in the collecting duct of nephrons via translocation of aquaporins (water channels) to the plasma membrane from internal sites within the cells
Diabetes insipidus
- central DI (CDI) results from causes that impair the synthesis, transport, or release of ADH
- nephrogenic DI (NDI) results from receptor, or downstream, unrepsonsiveness to circulating ADH
- loss of ADH effect results in polyuria, dehydration, hypernatremia and a hyperosmolar state
CAUSES OF CENTRAL DIABETES INSIPIDUS
- Acquired
- Surgery (transsphenoidal) – common
- TBI – common
- Idiopathic
- Autoimmune
- Tumours (suprasellar, lung, breast, lymphoma, leukaemia)
- Hypoxic brain injury
- Brain stem death
- Profound hyponatraemia -> cerebral oedema
- Radiotherapy
- Inflammatory conditions – sickle cell, sarcoid, Wegener’s, histiocytosis X
- Infections – Tb, abscess, encephalitis, meningitis
- Vascular disease – CVA, SAH, Sheehan’s syndrome, pituitary apoplexy
- Congenital
- Autosomal dominant mutation in ADH production
- Wolfram syndrome
ASSESSMENT
- History
- Polyuria
- urine output >4 mL/kg/hr (averaged over a 6 hour duration)
- Nocturia or new onset nocturnal enuresis
- Polydipsia
- drinking overnight
- persistent focus on drinking any fluid (which is unusual for child)
- drinking from unusual sources (eg animal bowls)
- Loss of weight (fluid replacing food intake and dehydration)
- Presence of intercurrent illness in a child with known DI (eg URTI, gastroenteritis)
- Past or family history of DI
- Head injury
- Constipation (from dehydration)
- Neurological symptoms (eg early morning headaches, vomiting, altered sensation, weakness)
- Medications (eg diuretics)
- Polyuria
- Examination
- Dehydration
- Neurological symptoms or signs (of an underlying disease)
- Fundal examination and visual fields
DIAGNOSIS
- Key findings
- plasma hyperosmolality (can be mild in partial DI)
- hypernatraemia (na >155 mM)
- polyuria (>3L/24h)
- urine osmolality < 200 mOsm/kg
- Investigate for underlying cause
- MANAGEMENT
- treat hypernatraemia
- address deficit in total body H2O (dehydration and hypovolaemia)
- supplement ADH
- consider associated anterior pituitary dysfunction
- treat underlying cause
- PROGNOSIS
- Post-traumatic diabetes insipidis is associated with:
- more severe trauma
- cerebral edema
- lower GCS scores
- higher mortality rate
- 57-69% overall
- 86-90% if early-onset (<3 days after injury)
- brain death (DI is present in ~80% of brain dead TBI patients)
- hypernatraemia correlates with higher mortality (e.g. Na >160 mmol/L)