It is also known as neurohypophyseal diabetes insipidus,[2][3] referring to the posterior pituitary (neurohypophysis), which receives vasopressin from the hypothalamus in the brain, via the hypothalamo-hypophyseal tract in the pituitary stalk. This condition has only polyuria in common with diabetes. Although not mutually exclusive, with most typical cases, the name diabetes insipidus is misleading.[4]
Untreated patients with central diabetes insipidus often experience polyuria, nocturia, and polydipsia due to the initial increase in serum sodium and osmolality. Central diabetes insipidus can be caused by various congenital or acquired lesions, and when the cause is unknown, it is classified as idiopathic.
Untreated central diabetes insipidus patients usually exhibit polyuria, nocturia, and polydipsia as a result of the initial rise of serum sodium and osmolality.[5] Patients may also experience neurologic symptoms associated with the underlying illness, such as headaches and diplopia, depending on the exact origin of the central diabetes insipidus.[6]
Even when their polyuria and polydipsia are adequately managed, patients with central diabetes insipidus frequently suffer psychological symptoms as elevated anxiety, social isolation, and an overall lower quality of life.[7]
Causes
The clinical manifestation of central diabetes insipidus is the lack of arginine vasopressin secretion as a result of the hypothalamus/posterior pituitary axis neurons being destroyed. Numerous different congenital or acquired lesions can cause the condition.[8]
Idiopathic
When the causes of central diabetes insipidus are unknown, the condition is categorized as idiopathic.[9]
Acquired
Central diabetes insipidus is typically an acquired disorder.[9] The following conditions may result in central diabetes insipidus:[10]
Surgery - Neurosurgery, typically in the sellar or suprasellar area, can induce central diabetes insipidus.[11] In most neurosurgery-related situations, central diabetes insipidus is temporary.[12] It is rare to have persistent postoperative central diabetes insipidus.[13]
Autoimmune - It is thought that the degeneration of the hormone-secreting cells in the hypothalamus nuclei accounts for between 30 and 50 percent of nontraumatic central diabetes insipidus cases.[5] Many, if not most, of these individuals may be affected by an autoimmune process.[17][18]Pituitary stalk and posterior pituitary lymphocytic inflammation is a hallmark of the autoimmune process.[19]Lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis (LINH) is the name of the disease process that most likely explains autoimmune cases of central diabetes insipidus.[20]
Pregnancy - Pregnancy can cause central diabetes insipidus due to vasopressinase enzyme.[10]
Brain death - Central diabetes insipidus is seen in roughly half of brain dead patients[21][22] and is due to pituitary infarction[23] caused by lack of blood supply to the pituitary gland from the brain via the hypothalamo-hypophyseal portal blood supply system.
Establishing whether hypotonic polyuria exists is the first stage in the diagnostic process.[8] Urine production over 50 mL/kg body weight in adults has been characterized as polyuria on 24-hour urine collection[24] and has also been arbitrarily defined as more than 3 L/day.[25]
Confounding diseases such diabetes mellitus, renal impairment, hyperglycemia, hypercalcemia, and hypokalemia should be ruled out by baseline laboratory testing once polyuria is established. Because individuals with central diabetes insipidus are more likely than those with primary polyuria to have plasma sodium concentrations at the upper end of the normal reference range, measuring ambulatory plasma sodium concentration is beneficial.[8]
It has been suggested to measure plasma copeptin as a stand-in for measuring plasma arginine vasopressin.[8] Measurement of thirst using an unmarked, basic 10-cm visual analogue scale has revealed that the start of thirst happens at the same osmotic threshold as arginine vasopressin secretion.[27] In patients with central diabetes insipidus, thirst responses exhibit a physiological pattern of linear rise during osmotic stimulation and reduction following water consumption.[28]
Following a diagnosis of central diabetes insipidus, MRI scanning of the hypothalamo-pituitary region is necessary to determine whether central diabetes insipidus is caused by a structural lesion.[8]
Treatment
In order to treat diabetes insipidus, the free water deficit must be restored, the missing hormone must be replaced (if central diabetes insipidus is present), and the underlying ailment must be addressed.[8] The medication desmopressin, an arginine vasopressin analogue, is used to treat central diabetes insipidus.[9]
^ abcdefgGarrahy A, Moran C, Thompson CJ (January 2019). "Diagnosis and management of central diabetes insipidus in adults". Clinical Endocrinology. 90 (1): 23–30. doi:10.1111/cen.13866. PMID30269342.
^Schreckinger M, Szerlip N, Mittal S (February 2013). "Diabetes insipidus following resection of pituitary tumors". Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery. 115 (2): 121–126. doi:10.1016/j.clineuro.2012.08.009. PMID22921808.
^Hadjizacharia P, Beale EO, Inaba K, Chan LS, Demetriades D (October 2008). "Acute diabetes insipidus in severe head injury: a prospective study". Journal of the American College of Surgeons. 207 (4). Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health): 477–484. doi:10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2008.04.017. PMID18926448.
^De Bellis A, Colao A, Di Salle F, Muccitelli VI, Iorio S, Perrino S, et al. (September 1999). "A longitudinal study of vasopressin cell antibodies, posterior pituitary function, and magnetic resonance imaging evaluations in subclinical autoimmune central diabetes insipidus". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. 84 (9). The Endocrine Society: 3047–3051. doi:10.1210/jcem.84.9.5945. PMID10487663.
^Pivonello R, De Bellis A, Faggiano A, Di Salle F, Petretta M, Di Somma C, et al. (April 2003). "Central diabetes insipidus and autoimmunity: relationship between the occurrence of antibodies to arginine vasopressin-secreting cells and clinical, immunological, and radiological features in a large cohort of patients with central diabetes insipidus of known and unknown etiology". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. 88 (4): 1629–1636. doi:10.1210/jc.2002-020791. PMID12679449.
^Imura H, Nakao K, Shimatsu A, Ogawa Y, Sando T, Fujisawa I, et al. (September 1993). "Lymphocytic infundibuloneurohypophysitis as a cause of central diabetes insipidus". The New England Journal of Medicine. 329 (10). Massachusetts Medical Society: 683–689. doi:10.1056/nejm199309023291002. PMID8345854.
^Johnston PC, Chew LS, Hamrahian AH, Kennedy L (December 2015). "Lymphocytic infundibulo-neurohypophysitis: a clinical overview". Endocrine. 50 (3). Springer Science and Business Media LLC: 531–536. doi:10.1007/s12020-015-0707-6. PMID26219407.
^Essien EO, Fioretti K, Scalea TM, Stein DM (2017). "Physiologic Features of Brain Death". The American Surgeon. 83 (8): 850–854. doi:10.1177/000313481708300835. PMID28822390.
^Nair-Collins M, Northrup J, Olcese J (2016). "Hypothalamic-Pituitary Function in Brain Death: A Review". Journal of Intensive Care Medicine. 31 (1): 41–50. doi:10.1177/0885066614527410. PMID24692211.
^Auer RN, Dunn JF, Sutherland GR (2008). Greenfield's Neuropathology (8th ed.). London: Edward Arnold. pp. 62–119. ISBN978-0340906811.
^Refardt J (September 2020). "Diagnosis and differential diagnosis of diabetes insipidus: Update". Best Practice & Research. Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. 34 (5): 101398. doi:10.1016/j.beem.2020.101398. PMID32387127.
^Christ-Crain M, Winzeler B, Refardt J (July 2021). "Diagnosis and management of diabetes insipidus for the internist: an update". Journal of Internal Medicine. 290 (1): 73–87. doi:10.1111/joim.13261. PMID33713498.
^Thompson CJ, Bland J, Burd J, Baylis PH (December 1986). "The osmotic thresholds for thirst and vasopressin release are similar in healthy man". Clinical Science. 71 (6). London: 651–656. doi:10.1042/cs0710651. PMID3791867.
^Thompson CJ, Baylis PH (October 1987). "Thirst in diabetes insipidus: clinical relevance of quantitative assessment". The Quarterly Journal of Medicine. 65 (246): 853–862. PMID3449889.