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1. Polyuria is generally defined as urine output of >3 l/day in an adult of normal mass.
2. Water diuresis refers to the passage of large amounts of dilute urine, secondary to diabetes insipidus or primary polydipsia.
3. Solute diuresis is characterised by excess urinary solute, commonly due to hyperglycaemia or azotaemia or following the use of loop or osmotic diuretics.
4. Cranial diabetes insipidus is characterised by polyuria with a urine concentrating defect, due to a relative or absolute deficiency of arginine vasopressin (AVP).
5. Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus is characterised by polyuria due to renal resistance to the anti-diuretic effects of AVP.
Lithium-treated patients with polyuria are at increased risk of lithium toxicity. We aimed to describe the clinical benefits and risks of different management strategies for polyuria in community lithium-treated patients.
Methods:
This is a naturalistic, observational, prospective 12-month cohort study of lithium-treated patients with polyuria attending a community mental health service in Dublin, Ireland. When polyuria was detected, management changed in one of four ways: (a) no pharmacological change; (b) lithium dose decrease; (c) lithium substitution; or (d) addition of amiloride.
Results:
Thirty-four participants were diagnosed with polyuria and completed prospective data over 12 months. Mean 24-hour urine volume decreased from 4852 to 4344 ml (p = 0.038). Mean early morning urine osmolality decreased from 343 to 338 mOsm/kg (p = 0.823). Mean 24-hour urine volume decreased with each type of intervention but did not attain statistical significance for any individual intervention group. Mean early morning urine osmolality decreased in participants with no pharmacological change and increased in participants who received a change in medication but these changes did not attain statistical significance. Only participants who discontinued lithium demonstrated potentially clinically significant changes in urine volume (mean decrease 747 ml in 24 hours) and early morning urine osmolality (mean increase 31 mOsm/kg) although this was not definitively proven, possibly owing to power issues.
Conclusions:
Managing polyuria by decreasing lithium dose does not appear to substantially improve objective measures of renal tubular dysfunction, whereas substituting lithium may do so. Studies with larger numbers and longer follow-up would clarify these relationships.
Nocturia has a detrimental influence on life expectancy, health, and overall quality of life. Its prevalence is fairly equal in men and women and shows an age-related increase in both sexes. There are numerous medical conditions that are associated with increased nocturnal voiding, such as cardiac diseases, diabetes, obesity, edemas of different origins, and sleep apnea. On the basis of analyses of information collected from frequency-volume charts, the pathophysiological conditions underlying nocturia can be categorized as: nocturnal polyuria, a low nocturnal bladder capacity, or a combination of the two. Clinical conditions should be treated as appropriately as possible before more specific treatment of nocturia is considered. Clinical trials have specifically addressed the use of medications for treating nocturia through improvement of bladder capacity. Estrogen treatment has been shown to have a favorable influence on urological symptoms in general, but studies indicating a specific effect on nocturia are lacking.
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