Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus Due to Hydronephrosis in a Patient with a Solitary Kidney

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Title: Nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus Due to Hydronephrosis in a Patient with a Solitary Kidney
Authors: Yoshioka, Katsunobu; Imanishi, Masahito; Sakai, Haruna; Morikawa, Takashi; Okada, Noriyuki; Konishi, Yoshio; Tanaka, Shiro; Kamikawa, Sadanori; Kim, Taku; Fujii, Satoru
Publisher: Clinical and Experimental Nephrology
Date Published: September 01, 2003
Reference Number: 636
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A 68-year-old man with a history of nephrectomy of the right kidney was admitted to our hospital with a 1-month history of polyuria (> 41 per day). He also exhibited hyposthenuria, which was unresponsive to treatment with exogenous vasopressin. Radiographic examination revealed partial obstruction of the left ureter and moderate hydronephrosis. The cause of the obstruction was cancer of the ureter. After drainage using a nephrostomy tube, the polyuria and hyposthenuria were gradually resolved. This is the first known case of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus due to hydronephrosis in a patient with a solitary kidney.

This translation by the NDI Foundation is to assist the lay reader. To provide a clear, accessible interpretation of the original article, we eliminated or simplified some technical detail and complicated scientific language. We concentrated our translation on those aspects of the article dealing directly with NDI. The NDI Foundation thanks the researchers for their work toward understanding and more effectively treating this disorder.
© Copyright NDI Foundation 2007 (JC)

The ureter is a tube within the body that runs from the kidney to the bladder. Yoshioka, et al., report on a patient with only one kidney who developed NDI due to hydronephrosis – a distention of the pelvises and calices of the kidney with urine due to partial obstruction of the ureter. He was admitted to the hospital after experiencing excessive urination over a one-month period. He was diagnosed with NDI. The patient’s kidney was drained and his urine output normalized over the course of a month. Later examination revealed that the cause of the uretal blockage was cancer. To the researchers’ knowledge, this is the first known case of NDI due to hydronephrosis.