P. Eggert et B. Kuhn, ANTIDIURETIC-HORMONE REGULATION IN PATIENTS WITH PRIMARY NOCTURNAL ENURESIS, Archives of Disease in Childhood, 73(6), 1995, pp. 508-511
Treatment of primary nocturnal enuresis using DDAVP is based upon the
hypothesis that antidiuretic hormone (ADN) secretion is insufficient a
t night. The known efficacy of the treatment on the one hand, and pers
isting doubts about its theoretical basis on the other, formed the bac
kground of the present study. Ten children (mean age 10.5 years) with
primary nocturnal enuresis were compared with a corresponding control
group of eight patients. Diurnal and nocturnal urine production, ADH s
ecretion, and plasma osmolality were determined. No differences betwee
n the two groups were found for urine production, ADH levels during da
y and night, or plasma osmolality. However, in order to regulate plasm
a osmolality the enuretic children required a markedly greater output
of ADH: 2.87 (95% confidence interval 0.091 to 40.35) pg/ml/mmol/kg v
0.56 (0.08 to 1.3) in the controls (p<0.01). The results are consisten
t with the established fact that ADH secretion is a function of plasma
osmolality, and they contradict the hypothesis that urine production
is increased at night in enuretics because of lower ADH secretion. The
findings do not solve the uncertainties in the pathogenesis of enures
is but they suggest there might be a difference between enuretic child
ren and controls at the ADH receptor level.