A disorder of the posterior pituitary gland resulting in deficient antidiuretic hormone (ADH, vasopressin) production. This results in large volumes of dilute urine to be excreted, even when dehydrated. Polydipsia follows.

  • May occur secondary to head trauma, brain tumors, and surgical ablation or irradiation of the pituitary gland.
  • May also follow infection of the central nervous system (meningitis, encephalitis, tuberculosis), or with other tumors (metastatic disease, lymphoma of the breast or lung).
  • Failure of the renal tubules to respond to ADH (nephrogenic form of DI) may also cause DI, resulting from hypokalemia, hypercalcemia, and a variety of medications eg. lithium, demeclocycline (Declomycin)

Clinical Manifestations

  • Polyuria: excessively dilute urine, reaching a specific gravity of 1.001 to 1.005. Even when dehydrated, the patient will continue to produce excessive urine. This may lead to dehydration and hypernatremia without adequate .
  • Polydipsia: intense thirst, especially for cold water, which may reach up to 20 liters of consumption in a single day.
  • Onset: may begin at birth if inherited, while onset may either be insidious or abrupt in adults.

Assessment Findings

  • Fluid Deprivation Test: fluids are withheld for 8 to 12 hours until 3% to 5% of body weight is lost. Urine specific gravity and osmolality is measured during the duration. In DI, urine concentration does not increase with increasing dehydration.
  • Plasma ADH and plasma/urine osmolality
  • A trial of desmopressin (synthetic vasopressin) therapy and an intravenous infusion of a hypertonic saline solution may also be performed.

Nursing Management

  • Client and family education on follow-up care and emergency measures:
    • Provide verbal and written instructions, including the actions and adverse effects of all medications being used.
    • Demonstrate correct medication administration and observe return demonstrations.
  • Advise the patient to wear a medical identification bracelet and a disorder information card at all times.

Medical Management

  1. Replace ADH
  2. Replace fluids
  3. Correct underlying intracranial pathology (if applicable/possible). Nephrogenic causes require different management approaches.

Pharmacologic Treatment

  1. Desmopressin (DDAVP) Intranasal od or bid to control symptoms.
  2. ADH (vasopressin tannate in oil) IM q24hr to q96hr reduces urinary volume
    • Should be shook vigorously or warmed, administered in the evening, and rotated between sites to prevent lipodystrophy.
  3. Clofibrate (Atromid-S): a hypolipidemic agent, but has been found to produce an antidiuretic effect when patients have residual hypothalamic vasopressin.
  4. Chlorpropamide (Diabinese) and Thiazide Diuretics potentiate the action of vasopressin, and as such is used for milder forms of DI.
  5. Thiazide Diuretics, Mild Salt Depletion, Prostaglandin Inhibitors (Ibuprofen, Indomethacin, Aspirin) are used for the nephrogenic form of DI.