Disorders of The Posterior Pituitary-SIADH/Diabetes Insipidus
Disorders of The Posterior Pituitary-SIADH/Diabetes Insipidus
Disorders of The Posterior Pituitary-SIADH/Diabetes Insipidus
Pituitary-SIADH/Diabetes
Insipidus
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Syndrome of Inappropriate
antidiuretic Hormone
Etiology and pathophysiology
– occurs when ADH is released in amounts
far in excess of those indicated by plasma
osmotic pressure
– this syndrome is associated with disease
that affect osmoreceptors in the
hypothalmus
– is more common in the elderly
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Pathophysiology cont.
SIADH is characterized by
– fluid retention
– serum hypoosmolality
– dilutional hyponatremia
– hypchloremia
– concentrated urine in the presence of normal or increased
intravascular volume
– normal renal function
SIADH has various causes
– pulmonary conditions-pneumonia, TB, lung abscesses, Positive pressure
ventilation
– trauma(most frequently head related)
– meningitis, subarachnoid hemorrhage
– AIDS, Addison’s disease
– peripheral neuropathy, DT’s, psychoses
– vomiting, stress and many medications
– symptoms may also be caused by ADH secreting tumors
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Clinical Manifestations
Excess ADH increases renal tubular permeability and reabsorption of water into
the circulation
ECF volume expands, plasma osmolality declines and GFR increases
Sodium levels decline(dilutional hyponatremia)
This hyponatremia causes muscle cramps, weakness etc
The client with SIADH experiences
– low Urine output
– increased body weight without edema
As serum sodium levels continue to decline
– cerebral edema occurs
– lethargy
– anorexia
– confusion
– headache, seizures, coma and possibly death if untreated
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Diagnosis
Diagnosis of SIADH is made by simultaneous measurement of urine
and serum osmolality
– A serum osmolality lower than the urine osmolality indicates the inappropriate
excretion of concentrated urine in the presence of very dilute serum
– Dilutional hyponatremia is indicated by serum sodium less than 134mEq/l, serum
osmolality less than 280mOsm/kg, and specific gravity greater than 1.005
Associated clinical manifestations correlate with serum sodium levels
– initally
• thirst, dyspnea on exertion, fatigue and dulled sensorium
– as serum sodium falls below 120mEq/l
• symptoms are more severe with
• vomiting
• abdominal cramps,muscle twitching
• seizures
– other Labs include decreased BUN, creatinine clearance and H & H
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Collaborative care
Treatment Goal
– restore normal fluid volume and osmolality
– If symptoms are mild and serum sodium is greater
than 125 mEq/l
• the only treatment may be fluid restriction of 800-
1000ml/day
• This restriction should result in a gradual daily reduction in
weight, a progressive rise in serum sodium concentration
and osmolality, and symptomatic improvement
– If fluid restriction alone does not improve the
symptoms
• 3-5% saline solution(hypertonic) is administered IV
• Diuretic therapy may be indicated to promote diuresis
• Lasix is usually used-it does not spare potassium and
replacement may be necessary
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Chronic SIADH
Water restriction of 800-1000ml/day is
recommended
If this is not tolerated two medications may be used
– stadol-which inhibits ADH secretion and is useful
in central nervous system causes of SIADH
– Declomycin(a tetracylcine)-causes nephrogenic
diagets insipidus and blocks the action of ADH at
the lefvel of the distal and collecting tubules
regardless of ADH source
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Nursing Management
Careful nursing assessment of the
patient who has had surgery or is
susceptible to the syndrome is
necessary
The nurse should be alert for
– low urinary output
– high specific gravity
– a sudden weight gain
– serum sodium decline
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Nursing Diagnosis
Altered Urinary elimination r/t excess
ADH levels
Fluid volume excess r/t excess ADH
Planning
– 1. Maintain fluid and electrolyte balance
– 2. Adhere to fluid restriction
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Nursing Implementation/Evaluation
There are no preventative measures for SIADH
Health promotion is identification of those at risk and
appropriate interventions
At risk patient include
– those who have had intracranial trauma, surgery
and those who have tumors or infections(meningitis)
Ambulatory home care
– may include fluid restriction
– educate signs and symptoms of fluid overload
– diet should be supplemented with Na and K
– If treated with declomysin-monitor nephrotoxic side
effects and signs of fungal infection associated with
administration
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Diabetes Insipidus
Etiology and pathophysiology
– Central DI occurs when any organic lesion of the
hypothalamus, infundibular stem, or posterior pituitary
interferes with
• ADH synthesis, transport or release
– Causes of DI include the following
• Brain tumor
• pituitary or other cranial surgery
• closed head trauma
• granulomatous disease
• CNS infections
• vascular disorders
• osmoreceptor destruction
• idiopathic
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Clinical manifestations
Characterized by
– increased thirst(polydipsia)
– Increased urination(polyuria)
Primary characteristic of DI is
– the excretion of large quantities of urine(5-
20liters/day)
– urine has low specific gravity(less than 1.003)
– urine osmolality of less than 100 mOsm/kg
– Serum osmolality is greater than 295mOsm/kg
– in the milder form urine output may be only 2-
4liters/day
– the client compensates by drinking large amounts
of water so that serum osmolality is normal or on
ly moderately elevated 12
Clinical manifestations cont.
Central DI
– occurs suddenly
• after intracranial surgery
• Usually has triphasic pattern
– acute phase-abrupt onset of polyuria
– interphase-urine volume apparently normalizes
– third phase-central DI is permanent-the third phase
is usually apparent within 10-14 days postoperatively
Neurogenic DI
– occurs from head trauma and is usually self-limiting
– may improve with treatment of the underlying
problem
– If oral fluid cannot keep up with urinary losses,
severe fluid volume deficit occurs 13
Clinical manifestations cont.
Severe fluid volume deficit results in
– hypovolemia
– poor tissue turgor
– hypotension
– tachycardia
– constipation
– signs of shock, CNS manifestations
– irritability
– mental dullness
– coma
These symptoms are a result of rising serum osmolality and hypernatremia
Because of the polyuria, severe dehydration and hypovolemic shock may
occur
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Diagnositc Studies
Must identify the cause
– Pituitary(central or neurogenic)
– Renal(Nephrogenic)
– psychologic(psychogenic)
Rule out psychogenic DI related to emotional
disturbances-occurs with overhydration and
hypervolema rather than dehydration and
hypovolemia seen in other forms of DI
Loss of large quantities of urine
Specific gravity of less than 1.003
Urine osmolality of less than 100 mOsm/kg
Serum osmolality greater than 296mOsm/kg
Recognizable causes as identified
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Collaborative Care
Therapeutic goal-
– maintenance of adequate fluid and electrolyte balance
– May be accomplished by IV administration of fluid(saline and
glucose)
– Hormone replacement with ADH(vasopressin)-IV, SC or IM
– In acute DI fluids should be administered at a rate that
decreases the serum sodium by about 1 mEq/l every two hours
– Atromid, tegretol and thizaide diuretics may also be prescribed
for symptomatic DI
– Long term therapy may be controled with desmopressin
acetate(DDAVP)-an analog of ADH that is administered nasally.
– It does not have the vasoconstrictive effect of vasopressin
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Nursing Management
Nursing management is based on relieving
or controlling the clinical symptoms
– fluid volume deficit manifested by hypotension,
tachycardia
– shallow respirations may be present
– signs and symptoms of shock may also be
present
– sleep deprivation due to polyuria and nocturia
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Goals and planning
Overall goals
– Maintain fluid and electrolyte balance
– have normal sleep patterns
– compliance with drug therapy
Acute interventions include
– IV fluids if client cannot keep consumption of PO intake to the
necessary amount
– Intake and output
– Glucose administration with NS
– monitoring fluid and electrolytes
– Specific gravity
– daily weights
– measurement of urine and serum osmolalaity
– administration of vasopressin or DDAVP as ordered
– bolus with iv fluids to treat for signs of shock
– Specific gravity should increase and urine output should decrease to
assure that treatment is effective
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Long-term care
Long-term ADH replacement needs instruction in
self-management
– DDAVP- is usually taken intranasally twice daily
– side effects include
• nasal irritation
• headache
• nausea
– These can indicate overdosage.
– Adequate client teaching of the outcomes expected of the
medication is necessary to insure adequate treatment
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