adipsia การใช้
- There are also some cases of patients experiencing adipsia due to a psychiatric disease.
- Adipsia can tend to result from lesions to hypothalamic regions involved in thirst regulation.
- Lesions in that region can also cause adipsia because of the extremely close anatomical proximity of the hypothalamus to ADH-related osmoreceptors.
- Adipsia may be seen in conditions such as diabetes insipidus and may result in hypernatremia . as well as following pituitary / hypothalamic surgery.
- Lesions or injuries to those hypothalamic regions cause adipsia because the lesions cause defects in the thirst regulating center which can lead to adipsia.
- Lesions or injuries to those hypothalamic regions cause adipsia because the lesions cause defects in the thirst regulating center which can lead to adipsia.
- It is possible for hypothalamic dysfunction, which may result in adipsia, to be present without physical lesions in the hypothalamus, although there are only four reported cases of this.
- Although dopamine plays a role in adipsia, there is no research involving exclusively the relationship between adipsia and dopamine, as changes in dopamine simultaneously mediate changes in eating and curiosity, in addition to thirst.
- Although dopamine plays a role in adipsia, there is no research involving exclusively the relationship between adipsia and dopamine, as changes in dopamine simultaneously mediate changes in eating and curiosity, in addition to thirst.
- Whilst diabetes insipidus usually occurs with polydipsia, it can also rarely occur not only in the absence of polydipsia but in the presence of its opposite, adipsia ( or hypodipsia ) . " Adipsic diabetes insipidus " is recognised as a marked absence of thirst even in response to hyperosmolality.