Transient diabetes insipidus with elevated serum osmolarity associated with 'benign' febrile illness.

A 38-year-old physician developed polyuria and hypodipsia four days after the onset of an upper respiratory tract infection. Subsequent investigation showed a concentration defect with dehydration that partially corrected with vasopressin injection (Pitressin) administration compatible with partial central diabetes insipidus (DI). Skull roentgenograms, EEG, and lumbar puncture were normal. The polyuria and hypodipsia slowly resolved without treatment. Normal urinary concentration ability was achieved by the 48th day, but a residual elevation in serum osmolarity persisted for one year. Review of the literature failed to show previous documentation of transient DI with elevated serum osmolarity from an acute, febrile illness. The mechanism is speculative, but may be related to a subclinical encephalitis. The true frequency of this syndrome and its relationship to the frequent observation of transient polydipsia and polyuria in "benign" febrile illness remains to be determined.

[1]  T. Berl,et al.  Nonosmolar factors affecting renal water excretion (second of two parts). , 1975, The New England journal of medicine.

[2]  J. Cohen,et al.  Clinical disorders of urine concentration and dilution. , 1973, Archives of internal medicine.

[3]  M. S. Pessin Transient diabetes insipidus in the Landry-Guillain-Barré syndrome. , 1972, Archives of neurology.

[4]  D. Streeten,et al.  Recognition of partial defects in antidiuretic hormone secretion. , 1970, Annals of internal medicine.

[5]  Kliachko Vr,et al.  [Anti-inflammatory therapy of diabetes insipidus occurring after influenza]. , 1970 .

[6]  R. Unger,et al.  Pathophysiology of epidemic St. Louis encephalitis. I. Inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone. II. Pituitary-adrenal function. 3. Cerebral blood flow and metabolism. , 1969, Annals of internal medicine.

[7]  I. Gamo,et al.  [On diabetes insipidus in children]. , 1962, [Chiryo] [Therapy].

[8]  B. Andersson,et al.  The effect of hypothalamic lesions on the water intake of the dog. , 1955, Acta physiologica Scandinavica.

[9]  C. Rupe,et al.  Typhus fever (Brill's disease) complicated by diabetes insipidus: report of a case. , 1954, Journal of the American Medical Association.

[10]  Sancetta Sm,et al.  Transient diabetes insipidus complicating bacterial endocarditis. , 1950 .

[11]  A. Mitchell,et al.  DIABETES INSIPIDUS IN CHILDREN: A CRITICAL REVIEW OF ETIOLOGY, DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT, WITH REPORT OF FOUR CASES , 1939 .

[12]  M. F. Michelis,et al.  "Essential" hypernatremia due to ineffective osmotic and intact volume regulation of vasopressin secretion. , 1971, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[13]  C. Kleeman Hypo-osmolar syndromes secondary to impaired water excretion. , 1970, Annual review of medicine.