37
Quality Ratings: The preponderance of data supporting guidance statements are derived from: level 1 studies, which meet all of the evidence criteria for that study type; level 2 studies, which meet at least one of the evidence criteria for that study type; or level 3 studies, which meet none of the evidence criteria for that study type or are derived from expert opinion, commentary, or consensus. Study types and criteria are defined at http://smartmedicine.acponline.org/criteria.html Disclaimer: The information included herein should never be used as a substitute for clinical judgement and does not represent an official position of the American College of Physicians. Because all PIER modules are updated regularly, printed web pages or PDFs may rapidly become obsolete. Therefore, PIER users should compare the module updated date on the offical web site with any printout to ensure that the information is the most current available. CME Statement: The American College of Physicians is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing education for physicians. The American College of Physicians designates this enduring material for a maximum of 1 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit TM . Physicians should claim only credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. Purpose: This activity has been developed for internists to facilitate the highest quality professional work in clinical applications, teaching, consultation, or research. Upon completion of the CME activity, participants should be able to demonstrate an increase in the skills and knowledge required to maintain competence, strengthen their habits of critical inquiry and balanced judgement, and to contribute to better patient care. Disclosures: Robert J. Ferry, Jr., MD, current author of this module, has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or health-care related organizations. Deborah Korenstein, MD, FACP, Co-Editor, PIER, has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or health-care related organizations. Richard B. Lynn, MD, FACP, Co-Editor, PIER, has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or health-care related organizations. PIER is copyrighted ©2013 by the American College of Physicians. 190 N. Independence Mall West, Philadelphia, PA 19106, USA. Diabetes Insipidus View online at http://pier.acponline.org/physicians/diseases/d145/d145.html Module Updated: 2013-01-29 CME Expiration: 2016-01-29 Author Robert J. Ferry, Jr., MD Table of Contents 1. Diagnosis ..........................................................................................................................2 2. Consultation ......................................................................................................................8 3. Hospitalization ...................................................................................................................10 4. Therapy ............................................................................................................................11 5. Patient Counseling ..............................................................................................................16 6. Follow-up ..........................................................................................................................17 References ............................................................................................................................19 Glossary................................................................................................................................22 Tables...................................................................................................................................23 Figures .................................................................................................................................39

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Page 1: Diabetes Insipidus - CECity · Diabetes Insipidus PIER is copyrighted ©2013 by the American College of Physicians. 190 N. Independence Mall West, Philadelphia, PA 19106, USA. Page

Quality Ratings: The preponderance of data supporting guidance statements are derived from:

level 1 studies, which meet all of the evidence criteria for that study type;

level 2 studies, which meet at least one of the evidence criteria for that study type; or

level 3 studies, which meet none of the evidence criteria for that study type or are derived from expert opinion, commentary, or consensus.

Study types and criteria are defined at http://smartmedicine.acponline.org/criteria.html

Disclaimer: The information included herein should never be used as a substitute for clinical judgement and does not represent an official position of the American College of Physicians. Because all PIER modules are updated regularly, printed web pages or PDFs may rapidly become obsolete.

Therefore, PIER users should compare the module updated date on the offical web site with any printout to ensure that the information is the most

current available.

CME Statement: The American College of Physicians is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide

continuing education for physicians. The American College of Physicians designates this enduring material for a maximum of 1 AMA PRA Category 1

CreditTM. Physicians should claim only credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. Purpose: This activity has been

developed for internists to facilitate the highest quality professional work in clinical applications, teaching, consultation, or research. Upon completion

of the CME activity, participants should be able to demonstrate an increase in the skills and knowledge required to maintain competence, strengthen

their habits of critical inquiry and balanced judgement, and to contribute to better patient care. Disclosures: Robert J. Ferry, Jr., MD, current author of

this module, has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or health-care related organizations. Deborah Korenstein, MD, FACP, Co-Editor, PIER, has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or

health-care related organizations. Richard B. Lynn, MD, FACP, Co-Editor, PIER, has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies,

biomedical device manufacturers, or health-care related organizations.

PIER is copyrighted ©2013 by the American College of Physicians. 190 N. Independence Mall West, Philadelphia, PA 19106, USA.

Diabetes Insipidus View online at http://pier.acponline.org/physicians/diseases/d145/d145.html

Module Updated: 2013-01-29

CME Expiration: 2016-01-29

Author

Robert J. Ferry, Jr., MD

Table of Contents

1. Diagnosis ..........................................................................................................................2

2. Consultation ......................................................................................................................8

3. Hospitalization ...................................................................................................................10

4. Therapy ............................................................................................................................11

5. Patient Counseling ..............................................................................................................16

6. Follow-up ..........................................................................................................................17

References ............................................................................................................................19

Glossary................................................................................................................................22

Tables ...................................................................................................................................23

Figures .................................................................................................................................39

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1. Diagnosis Top

Confirm the diagnosis of DI with appropriate laboratory testing in patients with chronic thirst, increased fluid intake (polydipsia) or increased urination (polyuria), urinary frequency, enuresis, or nocturia.

1.1 Perform a complete history and physical exam to identify characteristics

associated with DI and to identify its etiology.

Recommendations

• Ask about:

Persistent thirst, particularly craving water or cold liquids

Urinary frequency, enuresis, or nocturia

Duration or persistence of symptoms (typically of insidious onset, unless postoperative)

Appearance of the urine (typically very light colored or clear with DI)

Family history of similar symptoms or diagnosis of DI or diabetes mellitus

Headaches

Head trauma

Recent neurosurgery

History of pituitary disease and anterior pituitary hormone deficiencies

Menstrual irregularity

Pregnancy-related polyuria and polydipsia

History of renal or systemic disease

Medications and nutritional supplements

• Look for:

Signs of focal neurologic deficits

Congenital anomalies, particularly facial malformations

Visual field deficits and examination of optic nerve

Galactorrhea

Signs of secondary adrenal insufficiency or secondary hypothyroidism

Growth failure or delayed puberty in pediatric patients

Signs of dehydration, including hemodynamic and mental status changes (rare)

• See table Etiologies of Central Diabetes Insipidus.

• See table Etiologies of Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus.

• See table Definitions of Diabetes Insipidus.

Evidence

• The risk for DI is highest with procedures near the pituitary, which are most often performed to

debulk neoplasms (e.g., craniopharyngioma, astrocytoma, or retinoblastoma) (1).

• A 1999 review from a German university hospital documented postoperative DI in 59.4% of adult

patients undergoing transsphenoidal procedures (2).

• Gestational DI is transient and typically remits by 2 months postpartum (3); it is usually responsive

to desmopressin administration, but not AVP, because the placenta metabolizes AVP; desmopressin

resists placental degradation. Pregnancy may exacerbate preexisting DI (4).

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• Less than 5% of patients with DI present with hypernatremia; their manifestations include altered

mental status, lethargy, irritability, restlessness, seizures (more common in children), muscle

twitching, spasticity, fever, nausea, or vomiting (5).

• The defects most associated with DI appear to be holoprosencephaly or optic nerve hypoplasia with

absence of the septum pellucidum (6).

• The funduscopic exam may reveal papilledema due to increased CSF production or blocked CSF

circulation from a CNS lesion (7).

Rationale

• The specific etiology of DI directs treatment and follow-up management.

• Although rare, hemodynamic instability and mental status changes should be addressed

emergently as evaluation of the polyuria proceeds, because hemodynamic instability occurs only

when fluid intake is impaired and severe hypernatremic dehydration develops.

• Nephrogenic DI can be induced by certain drugs

Comments

• DI is a disorder characterized by the inability to appropriately concentrate the urine, resulting from

either deficient release of AVP (pituitary or central DI) or resistance to vasopressin action at the

level of the distal renal tubule and collecting duct (nephrogenic DI). In the first half of the 20th

century, Professor Ernest Verney first linked DI to a decrease in AVP secretion or action (8).

• Historical or physical evidence of an injury, disorder, or therapy known to be a frequent cause of DI

should prompt evaluation for DI.

• DI itself does not usually result in any appreciable abnormal physical sign; however, absence of

historical or physical evidence of a known cause does not exclude the diagnosis of DI.

• Dehydration associated with DI most often occurs as a result of coexistent morbidity, such as

anorexia, malabsorption, adrenal insufficiency, or cerebral salt wasting.

1.2 Measure urinary output from patients after neurosurgery or head trauma

to anticipate the development of central DI.

Recommendations

• Measure urinary output hourly and urinary specific gravity every 4 hours throughout the initial 72

hours after head trauma or neurosurgery to monitor for dilute polyuria, which is defined as:

Urine specific gravity <1.010

Urine output >3 mL/kg·h

• See table Laboratory and Other Studies for Diabetes Insipidus.

Evidence

• Increased incidence of DI has been reported after transsphenoidal procedures to approach

parasellar masses (9); however, the incidence appears to be lower than that with other

craniotomies.

• Several studies suggest that frequent, serial assessments of urinary output and serum sodium

concentrations after transsphenoidal surgery reduce the severity of complications associated with

DI by facilitating prompt diagnosis and early intervention (10; 11).

• In a cohort study, 102 consecutive patients (85 males) who suffered severe or moderate traumatic

brain injury were evaluated for DI at a median of 17 months after the injury using the 8-hour

water deprivation test. Permanent DI was present in 6.9% of the patients who survived the injury

(12).

Rationale

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• After neurosurgery or head trauma, patients may not adequately respond to dehydration and are

at risk for developing significant hemodynamic compromise if the central DI is not recognized

promptly and treated adequately.

Comments

• The development of DI after trauma or after neurosurgery can present in a classic triphasic pattern

that must be recognized. In the initial phase, the patient develops DI lasting 2 to 8 days due to

loss of AVP regulation as a result of neuronal damage. The second phase is antidiuresis

(pseudoremission of DI) lasting 1 to 21 days, which results from nonspecific AVP release as AVP-

containing neurons die. If all AVP-containing neurons are destroyed, phase 3 is permanent DI (4).

If some neurons remain, the result will be partial DI or full recovery.

1.3 Obtain initial screening laboratory studies if DI is suspected in the

outpatient setting to determine the need for an inpatient water deprivation test with desmopressin challenge.

Recommendations

• Measure 24-hour urinary volume and urinary osmolality to evaluate for dilute polyuria.

Request a voiding diary to measure and record the volume of each void for a 48- to 72-hour period during

ad libitum intake

Determine whether the 24-hour urinary volume is:

o >2 L/m2 in infants

o >50 mL/kg in older children and adults

For rapid turnaround (e.g., a postoperative setting), consider measuring the urine specific gravity rather than urinary osmolality (although osmolality is usually preferred).

• Measure blood glucose concentration to exclude diabetes mellitus (random blood glucose

concentration >200 mg/dL is consistent with diabetes mellitus).

• Measure serum sodium concentration, and consider hypernatremia in the face of hypotonic polyuria

to be a relative contraindication to the water deprivation test.

• Perform a water deprivation test to determine the type (pituitary vs. nephrogenic vs. psychogenic

polydipsia) if the diagnosis of DI has been confirmed by demonstration of dilute polyuria.

Concentrated urine after water deprivation indicates psychogenic polydipsia.

• If the urine does not concentrate with water deprivation, perform a desmopressin challenge to

assess renal AVP sensitivity and distinguish nephrogenic from central DI. In central DI, urine

osmolality will increase and urine volume will decrease in response to desmopressin.

• When the water deprivation test is inconclusive in children or adults with partial AVP deficiency,

consider a hypertonic saline challenge.

• See table Laboratory and Other Studies for Diabetes Insipidus.

• See table Testing for Diagnosis of Diabetes Insipidus.

• See table Interpreting Results of the Desmopressin Challenge Test.

• See table Hypertonic Saline Test.

• See figure Plasma AVP Levels.

Evidence

• The resolution of DI on administration of vasopressin by the rise of the urine-to-plasma osmolality

ratio >1 was first reported in 1954 (13).

• The classic water deprivation test was first developed in adults in 1963 (14) and in children in 1967

(15). Subsequent papers reported refinements of the water deprivation test (16; 17).

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• The hypertonic saline test was described in 1988 and has been used in patients with familial partial

central DI in whom the water deprivation test may be equivocal (16; 18).

• The first radioimmunoassay to quantify plasma AVP levels was developed in the 1970s (19).

Normal subjects and patients with nephrogenic DI displayed a significant increase of AVP levels

upon dehydration, whereas patients with primary polydipsia showed a moderate increase, and

patients with central DI showed minimal rise (16). Subsequent investigators evaluating clinical

responses to exogenous desmopressin administration to distinguish the various forms of DI

confirmed these findings (20).

• Copeptin is the c-terminal part of the AVP molecule and testing for copeptin has been used in place

of AVP. A small study suggests the test has poor sensitivity (58%) for central DI (21).

Rationale

• Measuring specific gravity in the afternoon avoids false-positive or false-negative results, which

occur most often with a fasting morning specimen or with sampling after a big meal; however,

urinary osmolality remains the preferred test.

• It is important to distinguish central DI and nephrogenic DI from primary polydipsia (psychogenic

polydipsia) because the appropriate treatments differ dramatically.

• The fluid deprivation test in combination with the desmopressin challenge usually provides the

definitive method for diagnosis to distinguish these types of DI but does not identify the underlying

etiology.

Comments

• All patients with developmental disabilities carry a risk for primary polydipsia, particularly

institutionalized individuals. Screen for this problem with a standard questionnaire (22). Positive

responses warrant formal laboratory assessment as described above.

• Measurement of plasma osmolality or serum electrolytes is rarely of value to screen for DI, but it is

diagnostic in the context of a water deprivation test.

1.4 If the diagnosis of central DI is confirmed, perform an MRI of the brain to

determine the etiology.

Recommendations

• Obtain MRI of the head, with fine sections through the pituitary, hypothalamus, and pituitary stalk.

• Look for the following on MRI of the brain:

Thickened pituitary stalk

Ectopic, posterior pituitary tissue

Hypoplastic anterior pituitary

• See table Laboratory and Other Studies for Diabetes Insipidus.

• See table Etiologies of Central Diabetes Insipidus.

Evidence

• MRI of the head with fine (<1 mm) slices through the pituitary, hypothalamus, and pituitary stalk

can be useful in determining the etiology of DI (23, 24), although formal studies have not assessed

its utility.

• At least 70% of normal children display a hyperintense signal, or ‘bright spot,’ in the posterior

pituitary in T1-weighted MRI; this proportion exceeds 95% in normal young adults and declines

with advancing age (25). Over 95% of children and adults with DI lack this bright spot on T1-

weighted MRI (1; 17); thus, the presence of a bright spot is much more specific in ruling out DI

(95% specificity) than is the absence of a bright spot to rule in the diagnosis.

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• Using a scale from 1 (least appropriate) to 9 (most appropriate), the American College of Radiology

in 1999 published appropriateness criteria that rank an MRI without contrast as 8, and an MRI with

contrast as 6, for imaging the brain when the diagnosis of DI is considered (26).

Rationale

• DI is often a secondary disease process; thus, the primary process (e.g., brain tumor) must be

identified and appropriately treated.

1.5 Obtain further studies to evaluate patients with nephrogenic DI to

determine its etiology.

Recommendations

• Base evaluation of nephrogenic DI in adults on the most frequent etiologies:

Electrolyte disturbances (e.g., hypokalemia)

Urologic anomalies

Specific drugs (e.g., lithium)

Renal failure

• Perform renal ultrasound and voiding cystourethrogram to exclude anatomic pathology in patients

with any form of nephrogenic DI that cannot be attributed to a metabolic disturbance or drug.

• Suspect congenital nephrogenic DI in the pediatric patient, and conduct appropriate molecular

genetic analysis.

• See table Laboratory and Other Studies for Diabetes Insipidus.

• See table Etiologies of Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus.

Evidence

• Molecular genetic analysis allows for early diagnosis of congenital nephrogenic DI, which leads to

early treatment and prevention of growth failure or mental retardation. The mutation in >90% of

patients with congenital nephrogenic DI is X-linked, and the remaining mutations are autosomal

recessive (27).

• Preadolescent patients without an obvious cause should be referred for genetic testing (e.g., the

AVP-NPII gene of familial neurohypophyseal DI) (28).

• Lithium, hypokalemia, and urethral obstruction comprise the most common causes of acquired

nephrogenic DI (27).

• Genetic mutations causing DI have been reported: AVP neurophysin II (AVP-NPII in familial

neurohypophyseal DI) (28; 29; 30); wolframin (WFS1 in the DIDMOAD syndrome) (31; 32); and

Foxa1 (linked to vasopressin resistance in mice) (33). In 2004, Spanish investigators reported the

prenatal diagnosis of DIDMOAD by DNA sequencing (34).

Rationale

• Nephrogenic DI is most often acquired in adults.

• Congenital nephrogenic DI presents at birth and can result in significant sequelae if not recognized

and treated rapidly.

Comments

• Congenital nephrogenic DI usually presents in neonates or infants in association with the following

signs and symptoms: polyuria, irritability, frequent vomiting, constipation, unexplained fevers,

failure to thrive, multiple admissions for dehydration, hypernatremic seizures, and mental

retardation.

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1.6 Consider the differential diagnosis of polyuria and polydipsia as the first

step in the evaluation of any patient with suspected DI.

Recommendations

• Exclude the more common causes of polyuria and polydipsia, particularly diabetes mellitus, before

performing the water deprivation test or desmopressin challenge.

• Exclude primary polydipsia of the psychogenic, iatrogenic, or dipsogenic type.

• Always consider the contributing or modulating effect, or concurrent anterior pituitary or other

hormonal disorders.

• See table Differential Diagnosis of Diabetes Insipidus.

• See table Etiologies of Primary Polydipsia.

Evidence

• In a 2000 study of 79 children and young adults with central DI, 61% had concurrent anterior

pituitary hormone deficiencies, including growth hormone deficiency (59%), secondary/tertiary

hypothyroidism (28%), hypogonadism (24%), and secondary/tertiary adrenal insufficiency (22%)

(1).

• Patients with hypothalamic-pituitary disturbances after traumatic brain injury can possess

abnormal ACTH reserve, hypothyroidism, and variable somatotropin production in conjunction with

central DI (39).

• The prevalence of primary polydipsia in mobile residents with developmental disabilities at a large

public institution was reported as 5% (40).

Rationale

• The primary differential diagnosis is between DI (water diuresis) and a solute diuresis (e.g.,

glucosuria or contrast dyes); and among pituitary DI, nephrogenic DI, and primary polydipsia;

however, gestational DI is limited to pregnancy.

• Primary polydipsia is fluid intake in excess of physiologic requirement and is divided into

psychogenic, iatrogenic, and dipsogenic forms.

• The psychogenic form of polydipsia represents drinking excessive amounts of water for primary

gain.

• The iatrogenic form of polydipsia is due to medical treatment, usually the excess administration of

intravenous fluids.

• The dipsogenic form of polydipsia is defined as a primary disorder of thirst due to reset osmostat in

the hypothalamic thirst center.

Comments

• Patients with primary polydipsia disrupt the renal medullary concentrating gradient and blunt the

maximal concentrating abilities of the kidney. In these patients, restoration of the concentration

gradient occurs within hours to days upon restricting free water and physiologic replacement of

sodium. However, patients with nephrogenic DI become dehydrated with free water restriction, and

restoration of the concentration gradient does not occur.

• Primary or secondary adrenal insufficiency produces impaired renal diluting ability or salt wasting

(hyponatremia), which can mask the presence of coincident DI.

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2. Consultation Top

Consult an endocrinologist for help in diagnosing DI and consult other subspecialists as needed depending on the suspected etiology. Consult an appropriate specialist to assist in the initiation of fluid and drug therapies, managing complications, or carrying out necessary procedures.

2.1 Consult an endocrinologist to assist in the inpatient diagnostic evaluation of polyuria; consult other subspecialists as needed.

Recommendations

• Obtain consultation with:

An endocrinologist for help in interpreting diagnostic tests or when the diagnosis of DI is uncertain

A nephrologist if the patient has nephrogenic DI due to renal failure or is at risk for developing renal failure

A pediatric endocrinologist for the specific evaluation of DI in infants or young children

A geneticist for evaluation of a patient with affected relatives or presentation before adolescence to provide a genetic diagnosis and plan counseling to the family

Evidence

• Several studies and clinical experience confirm that lack of appropriate monitoring or lack of

prompt intervention in patients with DI can result in serious morbidity and mortality (1; 42).

Rationale

• Due to the complexities of the diagnosis and management of DI, consultation with an

endocrinologist should be promptly obtained when this disorder is suspected.

• Consulting an expert who regularly deals with this relatively rare but potentially life-threatening

disorder will reduce onerous and expensive retesting.

2.2 Refer patients with central DI to an endocrinologist for help in evaluating, diagnosing, and managing DI and its complications.

Recommendations

• Refer patients with central DI to an endocrinologist for:

Adjustment of fluid and vasopressin therapy

Acute emesis or AVP-unresponsive polyuria, which could represent dehydration, adrenal insufficiency, or cerebral salt wasting

Electrolyte abnormalities, which might require inpatient management

Preoperative consultation before hypothalamic, pituitary, or transsphenoidal procedures

Preoperative consultation for any surgery or procedure in which the patient may be unconscious or receive intravenous fluids

Significant adverse effects that may require transition to another therapy

Evidence

• Hyponatremia can induce cerebral edema, and overly rapid correction to eunatremia places the

patient at risk for central pontine myelinolysis (5). In contrast, hypernatremia can cause

dehydration and tissue injury with overly rapid correction leading to cerebral edema (43).

• Patients with DI who develop mental status changes are at risk for dysnatremia because they

become nonadherent and cannot respond appropriately to their thirst (9).

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Rationale

• Patients who develop vomiting or diarrhea are at high risk for developing hypernatremia.

• Patients who become unresponsive to drug therapy may develop hypernatremia or hyponatremia if

a second disorder has developed, overlying the DI.

2.3 Consider referring patients with nephrogenic DI to a nephrologist or an endocrinologist for help managing complications of their disease.

Recommendations

• Refer patients with nephrogenic DI to a nephrologist or endocrinologist for:

Acute vomiting or diarrhea requiring a change in fluid or drug therapy

Electrolyte abnormalities requiring inpatient management

Increase in symptoms of polyuria or polydipsia, or >5% weight loss suggesting resistance to drugs

Worsening renal function, suggested by rising blood urea nitrogen and creatinine

Recurrent urinary tract infections, particularly in pediatric patients

Adverse reactions to drugs or lack of appropriate response to medical therapy

Evidence

• Clinical severity of nephrogenic DI can vary over time in the individual patient for unclear reasons

(45), and treatment should be adjusted accordingly.

• Overly rapid correction of hypernatremia has been shown to increase the risk for cerebral edema

(43), and places the patient at risk for developing central pontine myelinolysis (5).

• Patients with DI who develop mental status changes are at risk for dysnatremia because they

become nonadherent with prescribed therapy and cannot respond appropriately to their thirst (9).

Rationale

• Patients with acute gastrointestinal symptoms impairing fluid absorption or clinical

unresponsiveness to treatment are at the highest risk for developing hypernatremia and potential

hemodynamic compromise from dehydration.

• Alteration in disease severity also places the patient at risk for either hypernatremia or

hyponatremia.

2.4 Consult appropriate specialists for causes of DI other than tumors.

Recommendations

• Obtain a consultation with:

A neurologist for evaluation and management of disorders such as multiple sclerosis

A psychiatrist for evaluation and management of disorders such as compulsive water drinking

An immunologist for the evaluation and management of disorders such as neurosarcoidosis

Evidence

• Consensus.

Rationale

• Diverse causes of DI may require input from specialists with a broad array of expertise.

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3. Hospitalization Top

Hospitalize patients with suspected DI for management of severe electrolyte derangements.

3.1 Hospitalize patients to carry out the water deprivation test and desmopressin challenge to monitor response to initial treatment and to

manage complications during therapy.

Recommendations

• Always perform water deprivation testing and desmopressin challenge in an inpatient setting.

• Observe response to initial treatment in an inpatient setting once the patient is diagnosed with DI.

• Admit patients with:

Mental status changes

Significant dehydration and hemodynamic instability

Significant electrolyte imbalances, such as hypernatremia or hyponatremia

Central DI and underlying CNS lesions requiring neurosurgical procedures

Evidence

• Severe hypernatremia associated with neuronal dehydration has induced seizures, lethargy, or

labored respiration (5). Uncorrected hyponatremia may cause significant cerebral edema (5).

• Overly rapid correction of hypernatremia can cause cerebral edema, and overly rapid correction of

hyponatremia can cause central pontine myelinolysis (43).

Rationale

• The water deprivation test requires close surveillance to prevent inappropriate fluid intake and to

avoid severe dehydration.

• Patients should be monitored in the hospital after initiation of treatment to assure appropriate

response and to evaluate for electrolyte imbalances.

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4. Therapy Top

Ensure adequate free water replacement in all patients with DI and discontinue causative agents whenever possible. Tailor drug therapy to the specific etiology of DI.

4.1 Ensure access to free water in patients with partial central or nephrogenic

DI and intact thirst, and replace free water judiciously in other settings.

Recommendations

• Consider managing the patient with free water replacement as long as the polyuria and polydipsia

are not inconvenient to the patients or caretakers and the patient has intact thirst.

• Initiate drug therapy if adequate control is not achieved with free water replacement alone.

• Manage complete or partial central DI in infants by administration of dilute formula one-tenth-

strength dilution with water ad libitum.

• Instruct the patient to drink only as much as is required to satisfy thirst.

• Calculate daily maintenance requirements for patients with DI who are impaired in some way from

determining their thirst or from satisfying it.

Evidence

• Humans maintain their serum osmolality within a narrow range of 280 to 295 mOsm/kg by

responding initially with AVP release and later with increased thirst (44).

• Patients with DI who retain an intact thirst mechanism can respond to hyperosmolality simply by

drinking more water (9).

• Patients who lack an intact thirst mechanism or lack adequate access to water are those at highest

risk for developing hypernatremia and/or hemodynamic compromise from DI (9).

Rationale

• It is safe for patients with DI to drink sufficient water to satisfy their thirst. Restricting access to

water results in hypernatremia or dehydration even if the patient is receiving antidiuretic

(desmopressin) therapy.

• Management of DI in infants should usually exclude exogenous desmopressin administration

because infants receive their nutrition in liquid form as milk or formula and antidiuresis would

decrease liquid intake, thus interfering with adequate caloric intake.

Comments

• It is unwise to encourage high fluid intake in patients with DI because adherence to such a

recommendation has been responsible for many cases of hyponatremia during desmopressin

therapy. Instead, urge patients to drink only when they are truly thirsty, in order to minimize

hyponatremia.

• Patients who are too young to walk or talk, who have aphasia or stroke, or who lack a normal thirst

mechanism will require continuous assessment by the caretaker and direct supervision of their

water balance. This is best achieved by daily weighing of the patient.

• In infants, despite the inconvenience of uncontrolled polyuria, dilute formula is the safest therapy

with respect to growth and to prevent adverse events related to drug therapy. A pediatric

endocrinologist is most qualified to supervise such management.

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4.2 Use desmopressin in the outpatient setting to manage chronic central DI

in patients who have intact thirst.

Recommendations

• Administer intranasal desmopressin every 12 to 24 hours as needed (by determining the dose

empirically) in adult patients with complete central DI to control polyuria.

• If the patient lacks intact thirst, determine the serum sodium concentration every 4 to 6 hours

during the first 48 hours of desmopressin replacement therapy to identify the dosing regimen that

consistently maintains a normal serum sodium concentration.

• Allow patients with new-onset central DI to have breakthrough polyuria at least once a week,

unless they have long-standing stable DI and no history of secondary hyponatremia.

• Advise patients that loss of drug potency can occur rarely with overheating or prolonged storage

before use.

• See table Drug Treatment for Diabetes Insipidus.

Evidence

• Since the 1960s, multiple clinical studies have confirmed that the AVP analog desmopressin

effectively controls central DI (4; 45), although randomized trials have not been performed.

• For patients with chronic central DI, breakthrough polyuria prevents hyponatremia and allows for

recognition of the rare cases in which the disease remits (10). Patients with DI after trauma or

neurosurgery have recovered normal urinary concentrating ability and normal urine output as late

as 10 years after the initial insult (9).

Rationale

• Appropriate treatment of DI prevents electrolyte disturbances and improves quality of life for

patients with significant polyuria and polydipsia.

• Allowing for breakthrough polyuria at least once a week relieves the kidneys from maximum

concentrating function.

Comments

• Therapy with desmopressin is optimal for gestational DI because it exerts less uterotonic action

than vasopressin (9). Gestational DI often requires slightly higher doses to achieve control (45).

Healthy pregnant women have serum sodium concentrations lower than healthy nongravid women

by ~5 mEq/L.

• Gestational DI is best managed by administration of desmopressin every 8 to 12 hours, and it

usually requires doses higher than for central DI to adequately control polyuria.

• In some patients with osmoregulator dysfunction (hypothalamic adipsia), there is no desmopressin

regimen that will sufficiently maintain a normal serum sodium concentration. These patients often

require a regimen that forces a daily fixed amount of fluid intake.

• Patients do not overdose on desmopressin; rather, they can overdose on free water while under

the antidiuretic effect of desmopressin. In patients receiving desmopressin who develop significant

hyponatremia and low urinary output (water intoxication), consider the following: cortisol

deficiency, use of carbamazepine, inappropriate volumes of intravenous fluids, inappropriately high

oral fluid intake, and misdiagnosis of primary polydipsia due to an abnormal thirst mechanism.

• Intranasal and oral desmopressin are both effective. However, the bioavailability of the oral form is

about 10-fold less. Many patients find the nasal spray more convenient because of its more rapid

onset of action and greater predictability of absorption.

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• A report suggests that methylprednisolone pulse therapy can effectively improve lymphocytic

hypophysitis, obviating surgery while resolving the associated DI (46).

• Desmopressin intranasal formulations are no longer FDA-approved for the treatment of primary

nocturnal enuresis and should not be used in hyponatremic patients or patients with a history of

hyponatremia, according to an FDA alert.

4.3 Tailor the drug treatment of nephrogenic DI to its specific etiology.

Recommendations

• Administer thiazide diuretics and prescribe salt restriction to manage non-drug forms of

nephrogenic DI.

• Consider amiloride the drug of choice for treating lithium-induced nephrogenic DI.

• Consider indomethacin, in conjunction with thiazides, to increase renal water reabsorption in

patients with nephrogenic DI.

• Recognize that patients with nephrogenic DI often require multidrug therapy to control their

polyuria.

• Encourage a diet low in sodium and protein.

• See table Drug Treatment for Diabetes Insipidus.

Evidence

• Salt restriction in conjunction with thiazide diuretics and either indomethacin or amiloride can

decrease the polyuria by 50% to 70% (45).

• Thiazide diuretics effectively block sodium reabsorption in the distal renal tubule, thereby causing

natriuresis (10).

• Amiloride controls lithium-induced nephrogenic DI by blunting the action of lithium on the

collecting duct (47).

Rationale

• The AVP insensitivity underlying nephrogenic DI necessitates indirect methods of treatment, such

as decreased salt intake and increased salt excretion in order to maintain eunatremia.

4.4 Consider drug therapy for partial DI as needed.

Recommendations

• Consider chlorpropamide for treatment of partial central DI solely on the basis of lower cost, and

closely monitor for hypoglycemia.

• In patients with partial nephrogenic DI, consider a combination of desmopressin, thiazide diuretics,

and a salt-restricted diet.

• See table Drug Treatment for Diabetes Insipidus.

Evidence

• Patients with partial nephrogenic DI are effectively treated with desmopressin because they have

an incomplete renal resistance to AVP (10).

Rationale

• Although desmopressin and proper fluid management will always control polyuria or dehydration

complicated by electrolyte abnormalities, the expense of desmopressin may justify alternative

therapy.

• Optimal therapy may require drugs that act both centrally and peripherally or synergistically.

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• Patients with partial nephrogenic DI may respond to desmopressin, although usually not as

monotherapy, and they often require much higher doses (5 to 10 times) than that which is

effective for central DI. Combination of desmopressin with thiazide diuretics and a salt-restricted

diet are usually required to control their symptoms.

Comments

• In theory, chlorpropamide should be reserved for a patient who develops antibodies to

desmopressin, which has not yet been reported. Chlorpropamide works by stimulating AVP release

and potentiating its renal effect; clofibrate and carbamazepine act only by stimulating AVP release

(48).

• There is no longer any indication to use clofibrate and carbamazepine, which exert unacceptable

adverse effects and do not match the efficacy of desmopressin.

4.5 Treat patients in the acute setting after neurosurgery or head trauma with intravenous fluids, alone or in conjunction with vasopressin.

Recommendations

• Ensure that patients receive intravenous age-appropriate maintenance fluid replacement in addition

to replacement of urinary losses.

• In adults with acute DI after neurosurgery or head trauma:

Replace urine output with intravenous fluid of 5% dextrose in 0.45% sodium chloride

If significant hyperglycemia occurs, administer iv (regular or lispro) insulin to maintain euglycemia, starting at 0.02 U/kg body weight per hour

If the patient tolerates water by mouth, allow the patient to drink to satisfy thirst

• In children aged >2 years with DI:

Provide fluid resuscitation orally or parenterally

To maintain eunatremia, replace urinary output >3 mL/kg·h, milliliter for milliliter, with water by mouth

If unable to tolerate oral intake, replace with intravenous 2.5% dextrose in 0.45% sodium chloride (saline)

• If urinary output is excessively high to replace conveniently, or if the patient develops electrolyte

abnormalities:

Administer desmopressin by continuous peripheral intravenous infusion or intermittent subcutaneous injection, and titrate to control polyuria

Avoid parenteral vasopressin due to its often undesirable vasopressor effect

Avoid oral desmopressin in the acute setting because absorption is too unpredictable to provide reliable antidiuresis

In infants, avoid vasopressin tannate in oil, which lasts too long for the exclusively liquid diet of infants

• Monitor urinary output, urinary osmolality, serum sodium concentration, and serum osmolality

every 1 to 4 hours after initiation of treatment to prevent water intoxication and cerebral edema.

• Monitor for remission of polyuria if treatment is stopped because some patients develop transient

DI in association with neurosurgery or head trauma.

• See table Drug Treatment for Diabetes Insipidus.

Evidence

• After neurosurgery or head trauma, patients often develop transient DI, which resolves completely

over several weeks and does not require long-term treatment (10), as long as the

neurohypophyseal anatomy remains intact. This form of DI appears to occur most frequently in the

hours immediately after tumor debulking.

• A solution containing 0.45% saline minimizes the chance of excess sodium loading with high-

volume administration rates while maintaining the osmolality of the administered fluid >200

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mOsm/kg. Therefore, 0.45% saline solution is the fluid of choice for replacement in most

situations, except in neonates who require a lower saline dose (49). The infantile kidney cannot

adequately excrete a high solute load, resulting in hypertension upon excessive salt administration.

Rationale

• Patients in the acute care setting should be treated in a manner that permits rapid titration,

because they may have an evolving disease process.

• Aqueous AVP can be titrated easily because it has a short half-life.

• Parenteral desmopressin is equally suitable for management of DI in the acute care setting.

Comments

• For patients with combined DI and cerebral salt wasting, a two-bag system provides a convenient

treatment modality. Two bags of appropriate intravenous fluids, differing only with respect to

sodium content, are connected by a Y- or T-shaped connector to the single tubing provided to the

patient. One bag contains 3% saline solution and the other contains 5% dextrose in water with no

sodium chloride. Direct titration of the infusion rate from each bag permits immediate adjustment

to meet the patient's changing sodium requirements, with independent control of the overall rate of

fluid administration (41; 50).

4.6 Do not consider resection of CNS lesions in patients with central DI as primary treatment.

Recommendations

• Note that multiple CNS disorders can present with DI, and that not all CNS lesions require surgical

or radiologic therapy.

• Base the decision to resect CNS lesions on indications other than the presence of DI.

• Recognize that preoperative DI is unlikely to resolve after the surgery.

• Monitor any patient closely for DI after radiologic or surgical procedures performed in proximity to

the hypothalamus or pituitary.

• See table Etiologies of Central Diabetes Insipidus.

Evidence

• The incidence of DI in patients with craniopharyngiomas was reported by one group to increase

from 16.9% preoperatively to 59.4% postoperatively (51).

• Pituitary adenomas are rarely a cause of DI (52). One report of 255 consecutive transsphenoidal

procedures performed at a U.S. academic medical center disclosed that only 0.4% of the patients

in whom DI developed postoperatively had DI beyond 1 year after surgery (53).

• DI due to a Rathke's cleft cyst typically does not resolve after surgery (54, 55).

Rationale

• DI is not a surgical indication for any CNS disorder, because neurosurgery will not improve DI.

Indeed, procedures in the region of the neurohypophysis typically result in permanent DI.

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5. Patient Counseling Top

Use patient education as a key element in the overall management of patients with DI.

5.1 Ensure that patients understand the significance of thirst, access to water, urinary output, and proper use of medications.

Recommendations

• Explain the importance of responding to thirst and having access to water.

• Instruct patients on the appropriate use of the metered-dose, intranasal inhaler for desmopressin.

• Monitor weight and urinary output during acute illness.

• Instruct patients, or the parents of pediatric patients, to contact a physician if there is any change

in:

Mental status

Lethargy

Respiratory distress

Restlessness

Significant increase or decrease in urinary output

Decrease in weight by ≥5% over a 6- to 24-hour period

• Instruct patients to contact an endocrinologist if emesis or diarrhea develops or if previously well-

controlled polyuria becomes acutely unresponsive to exogenous desmopressin.

• Advise parents of pediatric patients to be more vigilant of these symptoms because infants have

less reserve than adults.

• Advise patients to wear a medical identification bracelet or necklace at all times.

Evidence

• DI is primarily managed on an outpatient basis; therefore, patient understanding and adherence to

appropriate treatment is critical to effective management (10).

• If a patient should become comatose due to acute electrolyte changes, a medical identification tag

can be life saving when the patient presents to healthcare personnel (10).

Rationale

• Patients lacking an intact thirst mechanism should monitor input and output daily to avoid water

intoxication.

• Vigilance by the patient or caretaker should prevent electrolyte imbalances and the neurologic

sequelae secondary to these disturbances.

• An informed patient or caretaker can anticipate problems quickly.

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6. Follow-up Top

Schedule periodic follow-up to ensure adequate control of DI.

6.1 Follow-up with patients annually to ensure normal fluid and electrolyte balance.

Recommendations

• Schedule an annual follow-up visit, unless problems develop, once the optimal dose of

desmopressin is established for an adult with DI.

• Inquire at follow-up visits about:

Polyuria

Polydipsia

Significant weight changes

Focal neurologic deficits

Change in mental status

Adverse effects of drugs

• Quantify levels of serum sodium, serum potassium, serum osmolality, and urinary specific gravity

or urinary osmolality, and obtain other studies appropriate to the primary cause.

• Monitor closely for disease resolution in patients with DI due to neurosurgical procedures, head

trauma, or drugs.

• Advise patients to promptly report:

Changes in treatment efficacy

Changes in mental status

Occurrence of dehydration

Acute illnesses

• Instruct patients who lack intact thirst to keep a daily log of:

Weight

Fluid intake

Time of each void

Time of each drug dose

Evidence

• Consensus.

Rationale

• Appropriate outpatient follow-up will anticipate and aid prevention of significant sequelae.

6.2 Obtain additional studies over time to evaluate patients with DI for occult or developing underlying disease processes.

Recommendations

• Obtain serial MRI of the brain every 6 months for 3 years in young adults with ‘idiopathic’ central

DI to survey for occult lesions.

• Consider renal ultrasonography every 5 years in patients with congenital nephrogenic DI to look for

hydronephrosis.

• Screen periodically for anterior pituitary hormone deficiencies in all patients by obtaining:

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Fasting serum cortisol level obtained between 7:00 A.M. and 8:00 A.M.

Serum level of IGF binding protein-3

Serum free thyroxine (T4) level by equilibrium dialysis

• In patients with progressive pituitary stalk thickening or new pituitary dysfunction in the context of

pre-existing stalk thickening:

Obtain serum and CSF levels of β-human chorionic gonadotropin and α-fetoprotein to evaluate for possible

germinoma

Consider pituitary biopsy

Consider bone scan (or survey) for possible histiocytosis

Consider the diagnosis of lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis

Evidence

• Idiopathic central DI, particularly in children and young adults, warrants serial MRI of the brain

every 6 months for the first 3 years after presentation to monitor closely for slow-growing occult

lesions (1; 56). Patients with ‘idiopathic’ DI should undergo brain MRI at least every 5 years for life

due to the delay in presentation of slow-growing germinomas and infiltrative lesions, such as

histiocytosis X (1; 9).

• Serum levels of IGF-I and IGF-binding protein-3 provide useful screening tools for growth hormone

deficiency in euthyroid, prepubertal patients with annual linear growth <4 to 6 cm (57).

• A study from the Netherlands of 30 male patients (ages 1 month to 40 years) with nephrogenic DI

revealed a high rate of development of severe urologic complications (particularly hydronephrosis)

(58).

• Re-evaluate the need for continuing medical treatment (9). After stabilization of a patient with

central DI, one study suggests an MRI scan for initial evaluation and annually thereafter for 4 years

to establish the etiology. Annual intervals in adults are reasonable (1).

• In one study of 79 patients with central DI (ages 1 month to 24 years of age) in whom serial MRIs

were obtained every 4 to 12 months, germinomas were the intracranial tumors most frequently

associated with DI. Frequent imaging permitted significantly earlier diagnosis of germinomas and

other neoplasms in patients previously diagnosed with ‘idiopathic’ central DI (1).

• Serum and CSF levels of β-human chorionic gonadotropin and α-fetoprotein may be useful in

patients with progressive pituitary stalk thickening to evaluate for possible germinoma (59).

• Lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis is an autoimmune process involving the posterior

pituitary that accounts for as much as 50% of spontaneous cases of DI in adults previously

diagnosed as having idiopathic DI (60).

Rationale

• Several occult disease processes may not be detected at the time of initial diagnosis of DI, but they

become apparent with additional testing over time.

• Occult disease processes include a variety of infiltrative and neoplastic diseases as well as

lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis, which is an autoimmune process involving the posterior

pituitary that accounts for as much as 50% of spontaneous cases of DI in adults previously

diagnosed as idiopathic.

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47. Batlle DC, von Riotte AB, Gaviria M, Grupp M. Amelioration of polyuria by amiloride in patients receiving long-term lithium therapy. N Engl J Med. 1985;312:408-14. (PMID: 3969096)

48. Adam P. Evaluation and management of diabetes insipidus. Am Family Physician. 1997;55:2146-53. (PMID: 9149642)

49. Rogers MC, Helfaer MA, eds. Handbook of Pediatric Intensive Care. 3d ed. Philadelphia; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins: 1999.

50. Janss AJ, Heller G, Grimberg A, Ferry R. Neuro-oncology-endocrinology interface: A patient who earned her salt. Med Pediatr Oncol. 1999;33:413-7. (PMID: 10491556)

51. Fahlbusch R, Honegger J, Paulus W, Huk W, Buchfelder M. Surgical treatment of craniopharyngiomas: experience with 168 patients. J Neurosurg. 1999;90:237-50. (PMID: 9950494)

52. Shin JH, Lee HK, Choi CG, Suh DC, Kim CJ, Hong SK, et al. MR imaging of central diabetes insipidus: a pictorial essay. Korean J

Radiol. 2001;2:222-30. (PMID: 11754330)

53. Black PM, Zervas NT, Candia GL. Incidence and mangement of complications of transsphenoidal operation for pituitary adenomas. Neurosurgery. 1987;20:920-4. (PMID: 3614573)

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54. Shin JL, Asa SL, Woodhouse LJ, Smyth HS, Ezzat S. Cystic lesions of the pituitary: clinicopathological features distinguishing craniopharyngioma, Rathke's cleft cyst, and arachnoid cyst. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1999;84:3972-82. (PMID: 10566636)

55. Fox CB, Treadway AK, Blaszczyk AT, Sleeper RB. Megestrol acetate and mirtazapine for the treatment of unplanned weight loss in the elderly. Pharmacotherapy. 2009;29:383-97. (PMID: 21502327)

56. Mootha SL, Barkovich AJ, Grumbach MM, Edwards MS, Gitelman SE, Kaplan SL, et al. Idiopathic hypothalamic diabetes insipidus, pituitary stalk thickening, and the occult intracranial germinoma in children and adolescents. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1997;82:1362-7. (PMID: 9141516)

57. Rosenfeld RG. Biochemical diagnostic strategies in the evaluation of short stature: the diagnosis of insulin-like growth factor deficiency. Horm Res. 1996;46:170-3. (PMID: 8950616)

58. Knoers NV, Monnens LL. Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. Semin Nephrol. 1999;19:344-52. (PMID: 10435672)

59. Seregni E, Massimino M, Nerini Molteni S, Pallotti F, van der Hiel B, Cefalo G, et al. Serum and cerebrospinal fluid human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) in intracranial germ cell tumors. Int J Biol Markers. 2002;17:112-8. (PMID: 12113577)

60. Tanaka S, Tatsumi KI, Kimura M, Takano T, Murakami Y, Takao T, et al. Detection of autoantibodies against the pituitary-specific proteins in patients with lymphocytic hypophysitis. Eur J Endocrinol. 2002;147:767-75. (PMID: 12457452)

61. Sohara E, Rai T, Yang SS, Uchida K, Nitta K, Horita S, et al. Pathogenesis and treatment of autosomal-dominant nephrogenic diabetes insipidus caused by an aquaporin 2 mutation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006;103:14217-22. (PMID: 16968783)

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Glossary Top

ACTH adrenocorticotropic hormone

ADH antidiuretic hormone

AVP arginine vasopressin

CNS central nervous system

CSF

cerebrospinal fluid

DI

diabetes insipidus

DIDMOAD diabetes insipidus, diabetes mellitus, optic atrophy, deafness

FDA Food and Drug Administration

FSH

follicle-stimulating hormone

GH growth hormone

HEENT head, ears, eyes, nose, throat

IGF insulin-like growth factor

LH luteinizing hormone

MRI magnetic resonance imaging

NaCl sodium chloride

SIADH

syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone

TSH thyroid-stimulating hormone, thyrotropin

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Tables Top

Laboratory and Other Studies for Diabetes Insipidus

Test Sensitivity (%) Specificity (%) Notes

Urinary volume >95 <50 Polyuria is defined as urinary volume >50 mL/kg

body weight per day in adults, or >75 mL/kg

body weight per day in children aged under 16

Urinary osmolality >95 >90 (except for nephrogenic DI) Urine is considered dilute when urinary osmolality is <300 mOsm/kg (16).

In patients not taking diuretics, urinary osmolality

is a useful screening test.

Urinary osmolality measurements are essential

components of the water deprivation test

Urinary specific gravity >95 >90 (except for nephrogenic DI) Urinary specific gravity <1.010 is considered

dilute (16)

Serum osmolality 5 35 Serum osmolality <282 mOsm/kg, or >295

mOsm/kg, is always abnormal (17; 35).

Subnormal serum vasopressin level for concurrent

serum osmolality is the gold standard for

diagnosis of central DI.

Serum osmolality can be used as a screening test, and it is also measured during the water

deprivation test

Serum sodium concentration 85 25 Hypernatremia is defined as serum sodium

concentration >145 µmol/L.

With intact thirst and access to water, patients

usually maintain eunatremia (36)

Serum potassium concentration Hypokalemia, a potential etiology of acquired

nephrogenic DI, should be excluded (16).

Serum potassium concentration is not a useful

screening test for DI

Blood glucose concentration Exclude the diagnosis of diabetes mellitus in the

evaluation of polyuria and polydipsia.

The easiest way to exclude diabetes mellitus is by

documenting the absence of glucosuria, because glucosuria is always present when it is the cause

of polyuria

Serum calcium level Hypercalcemia, with calcium levels above the

normal range specific to that test, can be an

etiology of acquired nephrogenic DI (17)

Serum creatinine level High-output renal failure can present with

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polyuria

Plasma AVP level Inter- and intra-assay variability are so

substantial that the frequent overlap of reported values hampers the utility of this test.

A subnormal plasma AVP level for concurrent

serum osmolality (particularly when serum

osmolality is >295 mOsm/kg) confirms central DI

Plasma copeptin level 58% in patients with complete or partial central

DI; abnormal in both patients with nephrogenic

DI

Unclear role; could potentially replace plasma

AVP(21; 37)

MRI of the head Patients with idiopathic central DI should undergo

MRI of the brain no less frequently than annual

intervals to exclude occult lesions, which may lag

the clinical presentation of DI by as long as 20

years (17; 24)

Renal ultrasound Exclude anatomic abnormalities such as polycystic

kidney disease, which may present as nephrogenic DI

Molecular genetic analysis Order DNA testing when nephrogenic DI is suspected (AVP type-2 receptor [AVPR2 gene],

aquaporin-2 water channel [AQP2 gene], or

Foxa1) or when central DI is suspected (AVP

gene, FISH for 22q11 deletion) (33; 38)

AVP = arginine vasopressin; DI = diabetes insipidus; DNA = deoxyribonucleic acid; FISH = fluorescent in situ hybridization; MRI = magnetic resonance imaging.

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Differential Diagnosis of Diabetes Insipidus

Disease Characteristics

Central DI Polyuria and polydipsia, often in the context of neurologic abnormalities. Polyuria decreases in response

to AVP

Identify underlying cause

Primary polydipsia Inappropriate fluid intake is the primary problem of this syndrome, which encompasses the distinct

etiologies of dipsogenic polydipsia (where the thirst mechanism is affected), psychogenic polydipsia (in

disorders such as mania), and the iatrogenic form caused by excess intravenous fluids

Polydipsia is distinguished from DI by the fluid deprivation or hypertonic saline challenge.

Etiologies of psychogenic polydipsia include schizophrenia and mania, and those of dipsogenic

polydipsia include granulomatous disease, sarcoidosis, vasculitis, and multiple sclerosis (16).

Patients with primary polydipsia will appropriately concentrate the urine given sufficient osmotic stress

Cerebral salt wasting Obligate diuresis with natriuresis is due to inappropriate release of natriuretic peptides and results in

hyponatremia

Cerebral salt wasting most often occurs after neurosurgery and has also been reported with other CNS

injuries or chemotherapy (41).

Inappropriate administration of AVP in the setting of cerebral salt wasting aggravates hyponatremia

(41).

The diuresis of cerebral salt wasting does not respond to AVP or its analogs

Nephrogenic DI Hereditary defect in water reabsorption at the distal collecting duct

Although rare, these forms of DI are the most difficult to manage. Patients typically present during the

first few weeks of life

Diabetes mellitus Insufficient insulin action resulting in hyperglycemia and glucosuria, the latter as a result of increased

solute load on the kidney

Diabetes mellitus is a far more frequent cause of polyuria and polydipsia than DI.

Glucosuria is the hallmark of diabetes mellitus, which distinguishes it from mild DI

Renal tubular acidosis A group of disorders characterized by metabolic acidosis as a result of the inability of the kidney to retain sufficient bicarbonate or to excrete acid appropriately

Patients with renal tubular acidosis display non-anion gap acidosis, whereas patients with mild DI

typically display normal acid-base balance

Chronic renal failure Hallmark signs and symptoms include elevated blood urea nitrogen, elevated serum creatinine level,

anemia, renal osteodystrophy (relatively common in children and rare in adults), and hypertension

Chronic renal failure of any etiology is associated with elevated serum creatinine level.

Patients with mild DI display normal serum creatinine level

Acute tubular necrosis Acute tubular necrosis results from injury to the kidney, which can occur from hypoxia, ischemia,

toxins, trauma, or disseminated intravascular coagulation that clogs the tubular lumen.

Characterized by proteinuria and inability to resorb solutes.

Initially, the patient is usually oliguric

Polyuria usually occurs as renal function improves.

Proteinuria is not a manifestation of DI

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Fanconi syndrome Impaired proximal tubular dysfunction impairs resorption of amino acids, glucose, phosphate, citrate,

urate, or bicarbonate, resulting in obligate diuresis

Children typically present with rickets, whereas adults present with osteopenia and osteomalacia.

Abnormal excretion of solutes is not a manifestation of DI

Urinary tract infections Urine culture is positive for the infective organism(s)

Urine is sterile in patients with DI

Cushing's syndrome (primary or secondary) Patients with hypercortisolism display polyuria secondary to increased free water clearance.

Classic findings of steroid excess include central obesity, moon facies, buffalo hump, protuberant

abdomen, thin extremities, and hypertension.

Laboratory studies reveal elevated 24-hour urinary free cortisol level, hyperglycemia, glucosuria, and

hypokalemia

Cushing's syndrome occurs either from excess endogenous cortisol production or exogenous steroid

administration.

The gold standard screening test for endogenous hypercortisolism remains the quantification of 24-hour urinary free cortisol release.

Patients with DI do not display the clinical findings associated with hypercortisolism

Renal tubulointerstitial disease Chronic tubulointerstitial disease may present as polyuria due to either vasopressin insensitivity or

inability to concentrate the urine

Common causes to consider include vesicoureteral reflux, chronic analgesic ingestion (e.g.,

nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs), or obstructive uropathy. Renal damage will be indicated by

elevated serum creatinine level or by abnormal excretion of protein in the urine

Osmoreceptor dysfunction Damage to the anterior hypothalamic osmoreceptive system, resulting in hypernatremia in the absence

of thirst

Also called hypothalamic adipsia and occasionally referred to by the misleading term ‘essential

hypernatremia;’ although rare, it is most often observed with congenital brain malformations (such as

holoprosencephaly) or after brain injury

Primary aldosteronism Patients develop hypernatremia, hypokalemia, alkalosis, low plasma renin level, and diastolic

hypertension

The most common etiology is aldosterone-hypersecreting adrenal adenoma (Conn's syndrome), followed by bilateral cortical nodular hyperplasia.

Patients with mild DI typically lack alkalosis and hypertension

AVP = arginine vasopressin; CNS = central nervous system; DI = diabetes insipidus.

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Drug Treatment for Diabetes Insipidus

Drug or Drug Class Dosing Side Effects Precautions Clinical Use

Desmopressin (DDAVP, Minirin) PO: Initially, 0.05 mg bid. Usual dose

0.1-1.2 mg total daily dose, dosed bid-

tid. Intranasal (0.01% nasal solution):

Initially, 10 μg in the PM. Intranasal

maintenance is 10-40 μg total daily

dose, dosed qd-tid. IV or SC: 1-2 μg

bid

Hyponatremia, water intoxication,

headache

Avoid if CrCl<50. Caution with elderly,

cardiac disease

For outpatients with chronic central DI

and intact thirst. Combine with thiazide

diuretic for partial nephrogenic DI

Hydrochlorothiazide (Microzide, Oretic) 50-100 mg total daily dose, dosed qd

or bid

Polyuria, hypokalemia, orthostatic

hypotension, hypovolemia

Caution with: CKD, sulfonamide

hypersensitivity, elderly, diabetes, gout, hepatic disease

For nephrogenic DI

Amiloride (Midamor) 5-20 mg bid-qd Polyuria, hyperkalemia, orthostatic

hypotension, hypovolemia, GI side

effects

Hyperkalemia. Caution with: CKD,

sulfonamide hypersensitivity, elderly,

diabetes, hepatic disease. Monitor

serum potassium

Drug of choice for lithium-induced

nephrogenic DI

Indomethacin (Indocin) Regular-release: 50 mg tid or 100 mg

bid

Abnormal renal function, elevated

hepatic enzymes, platelet dysfunction,

anemia, GI side effects, headache,

dizziness, tinnitus

CV risk and GI risk. Avoid with:

aspirin-sensitive asthma, severe CKD,

third trimester pregnancy. Decrease

dose with hepatic disease, CKD.

Caution with: CV disease, elderly. Drug

interactions with CYP2C9 inhibitors or

inducers

Combine with a thiazide in nephrogenic

DI

Chlorpropamide (Diabinese) 125-250 mg qd Hypoglycemia Avoid with: CrCl<50, elderly. Decrease

dose with: hepatic disease, CrCl<80

For partial central DI

= black box warning; bid = twice daily; CKD = chronic kidney disease; CNS = central nervous system; CrCl = creatinine clearance; CV = cardiovascular; CYP = cytochrome P450 isoenzyme; DDAVP = 1-

deamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin; DI = diabetes insipidus; GI = gastrointestinal; IM = intramuscular; IV = intravenous; PM = evening; PO = oral; q12hr = every 12 hours; qd = once daily; qid = four times daily; SC = subcutaneous; SCr = serum creatinine; tid = three times daily.

PIER provides key prescribing information for practitioners but is not intended to be a source of comprehensive drug information.

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Definitions of Diabetes Insipidus*

Complete central DI No AVP production by CNS

Partial central DI Some AVP production by CNS, but at low levels

Complete nephrogenic DI No renal response to normal or high serum AVP levels

Partial nephrogenic DI Diminished renal response to normal or high serum AVP levels

Gestational DI Inadequate AVP production occurring during pregnancy

*AVP synthesized in the hypothalamus is transported via the pituitary stalk and stored in the posterior pituitary (pars distalis). Increased serum osmolality stimulates vasopressin release, which in turn acts on

the collecting ducts in the kidney to increase free water absorption. This understanding of the pathophysiology makes the various definitions of DI self-evident.

AVP = arginine vasopressin; CNS = central nervous system; DI = diabetes insipidus.

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Testing for Diagnosis of Diabetes Insipidus

Water deprivation test*

Allow access to fluid ad libitum the night before testing

Start fluid deprivation for 7 or 8 hours at 8:00 a.m.

Measure serum osmolality, urinary osmolality, urinary volume, and patient weight at the start of the test, every 2 hours during the test, and at completion of the test

Also collect serum AVP level at completion of test (48)

If the patient begins to concentrate the urine without developing minor hyperosmolality or hypernatremia, consider administration of 3% saline at the rate of 0.1 mL/kg·min for 2 hours, while closely

monitoring serial levels of serum osmolality and serum AVP

Abort the test if patient loses >5% of weight from baseline

Desmopressin challenge test (immediately following the water deprivation test)

Administer desmopressin at 0.3 µg im, iv, or sc; or 10 µg intranasally

Allow patient free access to fluids

Determine urinary osmolality and volume 4 hours after administration

See table Interpreting Results of the Desmopressin Challenge Test

Differentiating partial DI from primary polydipsia†

Administer desmopressin daily for several days at a dose of 1-2 µg sc q 12 h

Monitor daily weight, plasma sodium, urinary volume, urinary osmolality, and intake of fluids

Interpretation of results

Resolution of polyuria and polydipsia indicates central DI

No effect indicates nephrogenic DI

Progressive thirst with hyponatremia indicates primary polydipsia (be cautious to prevent dangerous levels of hypo-osmolality and hyponatremia)

* If 3% NaCl is used to increase the plasma osmolality and serum [Na+] to hyperosmolar ranges (so that the plasma AVP level can be interpreted more accurately), it confounds subsequent desmopressin

challenge because the saline load from the infusion will cause natriuresis and increase urinary osmolality artifactually. Desmopressin challenge tests under these circumstances must be interpreted very

cautiously.

† If desmopressin is used to differentiate partial DI from primary polydipsia, serum [Na+] should be checked every 1 to 2 days for the first week because patients with primary polydipsia can reach dangerously

low levels of serum [Na+] in short periods of time.

AVP = arginine vasopressin; desmopressin = 1-deamino-8-D-arginine-vasopressin (desmopressin); DI = diabetes insipidus; im = intramuscularly; iv = intravenously; NaCl = sodium chloride; sc =

subcutaneously.

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Interpreting Results of the Desmopressin Challenge Test

RReessuullttss aatt EEnndd ooff WWaatteerr DDeepprriivvaattiioonn TTeesstt Results after Desmopressin Challenge

Urine-to-Serum Osmolality Ratio Serum AVP Level Rise in Urine Osmolality

Normal >1 1-5 NA

Complete central DI <1 <1 >50% rise

Complete nephrogenic DI <1 >5 0%

Primary polydipsia >1 1-5 <10% rise

Partial central DI >1 1-5 10% to 50% rise

Partial nephrogenic DI >1 >5 0% to 10% rise

AVP = arginine vasopressin; desmopressin = 1-deamino-8-D-artinine-vasopressin; DI = diabetes insipidus.

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Hypertonic Saline Test

To assess the ADH response to a hypotonic stimulus, administer a water load (20 mL/kg of 5% dextrose intravenously over 2-3 hours) before the hypertonic challenge

Keep the patient supine beginning 30 minutes before the challenge and throughout the test

Begin the hypertonic challenge with 0.9% NaCl administered continuously (0.05 mL/kg·min for all ages) by way of an indwelling catheter until plasma osmolality reaches 300 mOsm/kg, up to the maximum of 3

hours

Sample blood in lithium heparin tubes starting 30 minutes before the hypertonic challenge and then at 30-minute intervals

Determine plasma sodium levels, plasma ADH levels, and serum osmolality

Also collect urine before the start of the test and at 60-minute intervals after the test begins to assess urinary sodium and urinary osmolality

Record thirst sensation and blood pressure every 30 minutes

Look for an increase in plasma ADH levels as the plasma osmolality exceeds 280 mOsm/kg as a normal response

ADH = antidiuretic hormone; NaCl = sodium chloride.

Adapted from 16.

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Etiologies of Central Diabetes Insipidus

Idiopathic

Head trauma

Postneurosurgery

Neoplasm

Pituitary tumor

Craniopharyngioma

Meningioma

Leukemia/lymphoma

Metastatic tumor

Pineal tumor

Germinoma

Glioma

Benign cysts

Ischemia

Brain death

Sheehan's syndrome

Infiltration

Histiocytosis (formerly called Letterer-Siwe disease)

Sarcoidosis

Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegener's)

Bronchocentric granulomatosis

Infection

Viral encephalitis

Bacterial meningitis

Tuberculosis

Syphilis

Blastomycosis

Toxoplasmosis

Autoimmune (lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis)

Congenital

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Familial (autosomal dominant)

Prepro-arginine vasopressin-neurophysin II gene mutation

Septo-optic dysplasia (de Morsier syndrome): HESX1 mutation

DIDMOAD

Hypopituitarism

PROP1 mutation

Pit1 mutation

Cytomegalovirus infection

Rathke cleft cyst

DIDMOAD = diabetes insipidus, diabetes mellitus, optic atrophy, and deafness.

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Etiologies of Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus*

Electrolyte disturbances

Hypokalemia

Hypercalcemia (resulting in hypercalciuria)

Hypermagnesemia

Genetic (familial)

X-linked dominant

Vasopressin V2 receptor (AVP2R; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/omim?db=OMIM)

Autosomal recessive and autosomal dominant

Aquaporin-2 water channel (AQP2 gene; OMIM #222000427)(61)

Psychogenic polydipsia with loss of the medullary concentrating gradient

Cerebral salt wasting

Neurosurgery

Irradiation

Head trauma

Tumor-related: usually hypothalamic or pituitary neoplasms

Fever

Autonomic failure

Drugs

Loop diuretics (e.g., furosemide )

Phenytoin

Reserpine

Cisplatin

Rifampin

Ethanol

Lithium : may become permanent

Demeclocycline

Chlorpromazine

Volatile anesthetics

Foscarnet

Amphotericin B

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α-interferon

Mannitol

Olanzapine

Chronic tubulointerstitial diseases

Analgesic abuse nephropathy

Sickle cell nephropathy

Multiple myeloma

Amyloidosis

Sarcoidosis

Sjögren's syndrome

Autoimmune/lupus

Renal medullary cystic disease

Polycystic kidney disease

* Note that adrenal insufficiency mimics nephrogenic DI but does not cause it. Secondary adrenal insufficiency causes an SIADH-like picture from water retention. Primary adrenal insufficiency causes renal salt

wasting, but there is no defect of urine concentrating ability in most patients. The other listed causes of excessive natriuresis or salt wasting impair the renal concentrating ability, which resembles nephrogenic

DI clinically; however, treatment should be directed to the primary disease rather than to symptomatic relief of nephrogenic DI.

DI = diabetes insipidus; SIADH = syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone.

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Etiologies of Primary Polydipsia

Psychogenic (schizophrenia, mania)

Dipsogenic

Granulomatous (sarcoid)

Infectious

Vascular (vasculitis)

Tumors, rarely

Other (multiple sclerosis)

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Figures Top

Plasma AVP Levels

Relationship of plasma osmolality to AVP levels during water deprivation (dehydration) in patients with diabetes insipidus. Note that patients with neurogenic DI or partial neurogenic DI have vasopressin levels below 1 pg/mL. Patients with nephrogenic DI or dipsogenic DI have AVP levels that are greater than or equal to normal levels. Reprinted with permission from 16© 1988 by Annual Reviews www.AnnualReviews.org.