Water Disturbances in Cardiac Failure
| Title: | Water Disturbances in Cardiac Failure |
|---|---|
| Author: | Bichet, Daniel G. |
| Publisher: | Baillieres Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism |
| Date Published: | August 01, 1989 |
| Reference Number: | 230 |
| Title: | Water Disturbances in Cardiac Failure |
|---|---|
| Author: | Bichet, Daniel G. |
| Publisher: | Baillieres Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism |
| Date Published: | August 01, 1989 |
| Reference Number: | 230 |
Vasopressin containing arginine, as that from most mammals, including man.
Arginine vasopressin.
A factor that establishes the nature of an entity or event.
Heart failure.
Arginine vasopressin.
See definitions under "receptor."
The ventral part of the diencephalon that forms the floor and part of the lateral wall of the third ventricle. Anatomically, it includes the preoptic area, optic tract, optic chiasm, mamillary bodies, tuber cinereum, infundibulum, and neurohypophysis, but for physiological purposes the neurohypophysis is considered a distinct structure. The hypothalamus may be divided into four regions (anterior, dorsalis, intermedia, and posterior) or into three longitudinal zones (periventricular zone, medial zone, and lateral zone). The hypothalamic nuclei constitute that part of the corticodiencephalic mechanism that activates, controls and integrates the peripheral autonomic mechanisms, endocrine activity, and many somatic functions, e.g., a general regulation of water balance, body temperature, sleep, and food intake, and the development of secondary sex characteristics. The hypothalamus secretes vasopressin and oxytocin, which are stored in the pituitary, as well as many releasing factors (hypophysiotropic hormones), by means of which it exerts control over functions of the adenohypophysis portion of the pituitary gland.
1. Pertaining to the heart.
2. A cordial, or restorative medicine.
3. A person with a heart disorder.
4. Pertaining to the orifice (ostium cardiacum) between the esophagus and the part of the stomach immediately adjacent to and surrounding the orifice (pars cardiaca gastris).
Arginine vasopressin.
Heart failure.
Arginine vasopressin.
The regulation of sodium balance, fluid volume, and blood pressure by renal secretions: in response to reduced perfusion, renin is secreted, which hydrolyzes a plasma globulin to release angiotensin I, which is rapidly hydrolyzed to angiotensin II; this in turn stimulates aldosterone secretion, which brings about sodium retention, increase in blood pressure, and restoration of renal perfusion, which shuts off the signal for renin release.
1. Of or pertaining to physiology.
2. Characteristic of or appropriate to an organism's healthy or normal functioning.
3. Differing in, involving, or affecting physiological factors.
1. Increases in strength by evaporation.
2. The ratios of the mass or volume of a solute to the mass or volume of the solution or solvent.
A hormone involved in natriuresis and the regulation of renal and cardiovascular homeostasis. It is generally 28 amino acids in length but varies somewhat; it is synthesized as a prohormone in the granules of the myocytes of the atrium and is released into the circulation in response to atrial dilatation or increased intravascular fluid volume. Besides causing natriuresis, it also causes diuresis and renal vasodilation and reduces circulating concentrations of renin, aldosterone, and antidiuretic hormone, thereby normalizing circulating blood pressure and volume. Called also "atriopeptin" and "atrial natriuretic factor."
Pertaining to the kidney.
Pertaining to or composed of epithelium.
The movement of water in biological systems.
See under duct.
1. Administering sufficient quantities of a substance to test the subject's ability to metabolize it, as in the histidine loading test.
2. The exertion of lengthening force on a body part such as a muscle or ligament.
Of, relating to, or having the properties of osmosis.
1. Administering sufficient quantities of a substance to test the subject's ability to metabolize it, as in the histidine loading test.
2. The exertion of lengthening force on a body part such as a muscle or ligament.
Heart failure.
Arginine vasopressin.
Of, relating to, or having the properties of osmosis.
The image of a thing as held in the mind.
Heart failure.
Of, relating to, or having the properties of osmosis.
1. That value at which a stimulus just produces a sensation, is just appreciable, or comes just within the limits of perception.
2. A hypothetical barrier that stimuli must pass to be detected.
3. That degree of concentration of a substance in the blood plasma above which the substance is excreted by the kidneys and below which it is not excreted; such a substance is called a threshold substance.
4. Limen.
5. The minimum level of input required to cause some event to occur.
Of, relating to, or having the properties of osmosis.
1. One of two octapeptide hormones formed by the neuronal cells of the hypothalamic nuclei and stored in the posterior lobe of the pituitary gland (neurohypophysis), the other being oxytocin. It stimulates the contraction of the muscular tissue of the capillaries and arterioles, raising the blood pressure. It promotes contraction of the intestinal musculature and increases peristalsis, and also exerts some contractile influence on the uterus. It also has a specific effect on the epithelial cells of the distal portion of the uriniferous tubule, augmenting resorption of water independently of solutes, resulting in concentration of urine and dilution of blood serum. Its rate of secretion is regulated chiefly by the osmolarity of the plasma.
2. [USP], A pharmaceutical preparation of the same principle, prepared synthetically or obtained from the posterior pituitary of healthy domestic animals used for food by man; used mainly as an antidiuretic in the treatment of acute or chronic diabetes insipidus, administered intramuscularly as a test of hypothalamo-neurohypophysial-renal function in distinguishing central from nephrogenic diabetes insipidus; it may also be used to stimulate smooth muscle tissue, especially to induce vasoconstriction in the presence of hemorrhage. Called also antidiuretic hormone (ADH).
1. Growing from within.
2. Developing or originating within the organism, or arising from causes within the organism.
Arginine vasopressin.
Heart failure.
Within the kidney.
Heart failure.
1. Pertaining to, caused by, or exhibiting sympathy.
2. Pertaining to the sympathetic nervous system or one of its nerves.
1. Conveying away from a center; called also centrifugal.
2. Something that so conducts.
Oxygenated blood, found in the pulmonary veins, the left chambers of the heart, and the systemic arteries; it is bright red in color.
The greatest possible, allowable, or appreciable; the reverse of minimal .
The act or process of absorbing again, as the selective absorption by the kidneys of substances (glucose, proteins, sodium, etc.) already secreted into the renal tubules, and their return to the circulating blood.
A dissolved substance.
One of a pair of vertebrate organs situated in the body cavity near the spinal column that excrete waste products of metabolism, in man are bean-shaped organs about 4-1/2 inches long lying behind the peritoneum in a mass of fatty tissue, and consist chiefly of nephrons by which urine is secreted, collected, and discharged into a main cavity whence it is conveyed by the ureter to the bladder.
That portion of the water in body tissues which is not bound by macromolecules or organelles.
See correlation.
1. Pertaining to the heart.
2. A cordial, or restorative medicine.
3. A person with a heart disorder.
4. Pertaining to the orifice (ostium cardiacum) between the esophagus and the part of the stomach immediately adjacent to and surrounding the orifice (pars cardiaca gastris).
