V2R Structure and Diabetes Insipidus
| Title: | V2R Structure and Diabetes Insipidus |
|---|---|
| Author: | Birnbaumer, Mariel |
| Publisher: | Receptors and Channels |
| Date Published: | January 01, 2002 |
| Reference Number: | 590 |
| Title: | V2R Structure and Diabetes Insipidus |
|---|---|
| Author: | Birnbaumer, Mariel |
| Publisher: | Receptors and Channels |
| Date Published: | January 01, 2002 |
| Reference Number: | 590 |
A general term referring to disorders characterized by excessive urine excretion (polyuria), as in diabetes mellitus and diabetes insipidus. When used alone, the term refers to diabetes mellitus.
A familial constitutional disorder of carbohydrate metabolism characterized by inadequate secretion or utilization of insulin, by excessive urine production, by excessive amounts of sugar in the blood and urine, and by thirst, hunger, and loss of weight.
A disorder of the pituitary gland characterized by intense thirst and by the excretion of large amounts of urine.
diabetes insipidus, central - A metabolic disorder due to injury of the neurohypophyseal system, which results in a deficient quantity of antidiuretic hormone being released or produced, and thus in failure of tubular reabsorption of water in the kidney. As a result, a large amount of urine of low specific gravity is excreted, followed by dehydration and great thirst; it is often attended by voracious appetite, loss of strength, and emaciation. It may be inherited, acquired, or idiopathic.
diabetes insipidus, nephrogenic - A syndrome of polyuria and hyposthenuria caused by the failure of the renal tubules to reabsorb water in response to antidiuretic hormone, without disturbance in the renal filtration and solute excretion rates; the condition does not respond to exogenous vasopressin. It may be inherited as a rare X-linked trait or be acquired as a result of drug therapy or systemic disease.
diabetes insipidus, pituitary - Central diabetes insipidus (See above).
Diabetes insipidus.
Marked or distinguished as a characteristic.
The passage of a large volume of urine in a given period, a characteristic of diabetes.
A general term referring to disorders characterized by excessive urine excretion (polyuria), as in diabetes mellitus and diabetes insipidus. When used alone, the term refers to diabetes mellitus.
Pain, torment, distress, torture.
The study of molecular structures and events underlying biological processes, including the relation between genes and the functional characteristics they determine.
1. Relating to or determined by the origin, development, or causal antecedents of something.
2. Of, relating to, or being a gene.
That which has been acquired by transmission from parent to offspring.
Consisting of, including, or relating to a great number; many.
1. A beginning or start.
2. An assault or attack.
Diabetes insipidus.
1. Initiated, actuated, or set off.
2. Fired by pulling a trigger.
A pair of vertebrate organs situated in the body cavity near the spinal column that excrete waste products of metabolism, in man are bean-shaped organs about 4-1/2 inches long lying behind the peritoneum in a mass of fatty tissue, and consist chiefly of nephrons by which urine is secreted, collected, and discharged into a main cavity whence it is conveyed by the ureter to the bladder.
The anatomical and functional unit of the kidney, consisting of the renal corpuscle, the proximal convoluted tubule, the descending and ascending limbs of Henle's loop, the distal convoluted tubule, and the collecting tubule.
That which has been acquired by transmission from parent to offspring.
A disorder of the pituitary gland characterized by intense thirst and by the excretion of large amounts of urine.
diabetes insipidus, central - A metabolic disorder due to injury of the neurohypophyseal system, which results in a deficient quantity of antidiuretic hormone being released or produced, and thus in failure of tubular reabsorption of water in the kidney. As a result, a large amount of urine of low specific gravity is excreted, followed by dehydration and great thirst; it is often attended by voracious appetite, loss of strength, and emaciation. It may be inherited, acquired, or idiopathic.
diabetes insipidus, nephrogenic - A syndrome of polyuria and hyposthenuria caused by the failure of the renal tubules to reabsorb water in response to antidiuretic hormone, without disturbance in the renal filtration and solute excretion rates; the condition does not respond to exogenous vasopressin. It may be inherited as a rare X-linked trait or be acquired as a result of drug therapy or systemic disease.
diabetes insipidus, pituitary - Central diabetes insipidus (See above).
Marked or distinguished as a characteristic.
A pair of vertebrate organs situated in the body cavity near the spinal column that excrete waste products of metabolism, in man are bean-shaped organs about 4-1/2 inches long lying behind the peritoneum in a mass of fatty tissue, and consist chiefly of nephrons by which urine is secreted, collected, and discharged into a main cavity whence it is conveyed by the ureter to the bladder.
1. Brought to a common center; gathered together at one point.
2. Having increased the strength by diminishing the bulk of, as of a liquid; condensed.
3. A drug or other preparation that has been strengthened by the evaporation of its non-active parts.
The fluid excreted by the kidneys, passed through the ureters, stored in the bladder, and discharged through the urethra. Urine, in health, has an amber color, a slight acid reaction, a peculiar odor, and a bitter, saline taste.
The fluid excreted by the kidneys, passed through the ureters, stored in the bladder, and discharged through the urethra. Urine, in health, has an amber color, a slight acid reaction, a peculiar odor, and a bitter, saline taste.
The passage of a large volume of urine in a given period, a characteristic of diabetes.
Excessive or abnormal thirst.
Of, pertaining to, or composed of molecules.
The study or theory of the factors that cause disease and the method of their introduction to the host; the causes or origin of a disease or disorder.
1. One of two octapeptide hormones formed by the neuronal cells of the hypothalamic nuclei and stored in the posterior lobe of the pituitary gland (neurohypophysis), the other being oxytocin. It stimulates the contraction of the muscular tissue of the capillaries and arterioles, raising the blood pressure. It promotes contraction of the intestinal musculature and increases peristalsis, and also exerts some contractile influence on the uterus. It also has a specific effect on the epithelial cells of the distal portion of the uriniferous tubule, augmenting resorption of water independently of solutes, resulting in concentration of urine and dilution of blood serum. Its rate of secretion is regulated chiefly by the osmolarity of the plasma.
2. [USP], A pharmaceutical preparation of the same principle, prepared synthetically or obtained from the posterior pituitary of healthy domestic animals used for food by man; used mainly as an antidiuretic in the treatment of acute or chronic diabetes insipidus, administered intramuscularly as a test of hypothalamo-neurohypophysial-renal function in distinguishing central from nephrogenic diabetes insipidus; it may also be used to stimulate smooth muscle tissue, especially to induce vasoconstriction in the presence of hemorrhage. Called also antidiuretic hormone (ADH).
