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Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 279: E1305-E1310, 2000;
0193-1849/00 $5.00
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Vol. 279, Issue 6, E1305-E1310, December 2000

Dehydration-induced vasopressin secretion in humans: involvement of the histaminergic system

Andreas Kjær1,2, Ulrich Knigge1,3, Henrik Jørgensen1, and Jørgen Warberg1

1 Department of Medical Physiology, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, The Panum Institute; 2 Department of Clinical Physiology and Nuclear Medicine, and 3 Department of Surgery C, Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, DK-2200 Copenhagen N, Denmark

In rats, the hypothalamic neurotransmitter histamine participates in regulation of vasopressin secretion and seems to be of physiological importance, because blockade of the histaminergic system reduces dehydration-induced vasopressin secretion. We investigated whether histamine is also involved in regulation of vasopressin secretion during dehydration in humans. We found that 40 h of dehydration gradually increased plasma osmolality by 10 mosmol/kg and induced a fourfold increase in vasopressin levels. Pretreatment with the H2-receptor antagonists cimetidine or ranitidine significantly reduced the dehydration-induced increase in vasopressin levels ~40% after 34 and 37 h of dehydration, whereas this was not the case with the H1-receptor antagonist mepyramine. Dehydration reduced aldosterone secretion by ~50%. This effect of dehydration was reduced by both H1- and H2-receptor blockade after 16 and/or 34 h of dehydration. We conclude that vasopressin secretion in response to dehydration in humans is under the regulatory influence of histamine and that the effect seems to be mediated via H2-receptors. In addition, the regulation of aldosterone secretion during dehydration also seems to involve the histaminergic system via H1 and H2 receptors.

histamine H1 receptor; histamine H2 receptor


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