Syndrome of Inappropriate Anti-Diuretic Hormone (SIADH): Pathogenesis and clinical
Malignancy
(e.g. Small cell lung cancer, head and neck cancer)
Tumor originates from neuroendocrine cells
Tumor acts as an ectopic site of ADH production
ADH binds receptors on basolateral side (facing peritubular capillary) of principal cells in nephron
ADH ↑ principal cells’ production of Aquaporin type II channels on their apical surface (side facing tubule lumen)
↑ Reabsorption of water from the collecting ducts back into circulation
↑ Blood Volume (↑ extracellular fluid volume)
Blood Na+ levels diluted
Hyponatremia
(blood Na+ <135 mEq/L)
Brain injury
(e.g. Stroke, encephalitis hemorrhage, trauma)
↑ hypothalamic ADH production, storage in posterior pituitary, & pituitary secretion of ADH
↑ Uncontrolled ADH secretion
SIADH
(Syndrome of Inappropriate Anti-Diuretic Hormone)
Drugs
(e.g. Cyclophosphamide, SSRIs, vincristine)
Break down into active metabolites
Metabolites mimic ADH activity
findings
Authors: Krusang Patel Yan Yu* Reviewers: Davis Maclean Brooke Fallis Juliya Hemmett* * MD at time of publication
Atria and Ventricles of the heart stretch
Heart secretes ↑ atrial natriuretic and
B-type natriuretic peptides (ANP/BNP)
Peptides promotes natriuresis (excretion of Na+ into urine)
Loss of Na+ in serumàalters charge balance across neuron
membranesàImproper action potential firing:
↓ Renin secretion
↓ Release of Angiotensin II & Aldosterone
↓Reabsorption of Na+ into circulation
in area postrema of medulla
in hypothalamus in motor neurons
Extracellular fluid volume becomes hypotonic relative to intracellular fluid volume
Water moves from circulation into cells
Extracellular fluid volume normalizes
Euvolemia
Nausea
Headaches Muscle Cramps
↓ Urine volume
Cells, particularly neurons, swell up
Cerebral edema
Neurons burst and die
Severe Neurocognitive
Effects (confusion, mood swings, hallucinations, seizure, coma)
Legend:
Pathophysiology
Mechanism
Sign/Symptom/Lab Finding
Complications
Published Dec 30, 2021 on www.thecalgaryguide.com