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A Comparison of Plasma Vasopressin Measurements with a Standard Indirect Test in the Differential Diagnosis of Polyuria

List of authors.
  • Robert L. Zerbe, M.D.,
  • and Gary L. Robertson, M.D.

Abstract

The diagnoses provided by a standard indirect test of vasopressin function were compared with those obtained by radioimmunoassay of plasma vasopressin in 24 patients with nonglucosuric polyuria. All seven cases of severe neurogenic diabetes insipidus diagnosed by the indirect tests were confirmed by the vasopressin assay. However, two of six patients with partial neurogenic diabetes insipidus by indirect criteria had normal vasopressin secretion by the direct assay; one was found to have primary polydipsia, and the other nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. Moreover, three of 10 patients diagnosed as having primary polydipsia by the indirect test had clear evidence of partial vasopressin deficiency by the direct assay. The inability of the indirect test to distinguish accurately between partial neurogenic diabetes insipidus and primary polydipsia may be explained by increased sensitivity to low concentrations of vasopressin in the former disorder and a reduction of maximal concentrating ability in both. We conclude that the incorporation of a vasopressin assay improves accuracy in the differential diagnosis of polyuria. (N Engl J Med. 1981; 305:1539–46.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported by research funds from the Public Health Service (PHS 5 MO1 RR 00055 and PHS 5 MO1 RR 00750), the Veterans Administration, and the Block Fund of the University of Chicago.

Presented in part at the 37th annual meeting of the American Federation for Clinical Research, Washington, D.C., May 1980.

We are indebted to Mary Beth Gaskill, Mary Lee Conder, Jean Musselman, Robert Redmond, Linda Zerbe, and Nan McCleary for technical assistance and to Constance Hunt for preparation of the manuscript.

Author Affiliations

From the Section of Endocrinology, Department of Medicine, Indiana University and Veterans Administration Medical Center, Indianapolis, and the Department of Medicine, University of Chicago–Pritzker School of Medicine, Chicago. Address reprint requests to Dr. Robertson at the Department of Medicine, University of Chicago–Pritzker School of Medicine, 950 E. 59th St., Chicago, IL 60637.

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