Intensive Care Research (Jul 2024)

Septic Shock, Tubular Necrosis, and Central Diabetes Insipidus: A Challenging Syndrome

  • Gabriele Melegari,
  • Antonio Manenti,
  • Federica Arturi,
  • Eugenia Gualdi,
  • Sonia Filoni,
  • Gabriele Zelent,
  • Alberto Barbieri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s44231-024-00065-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 3
pp. 149 – 154

Abstract

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Abstract Background The association between septic shock, acute tubular necrosis, and central diabetes insipidus is infrequent: our recent clinical observation invited us to deepen its pathophysiological features. Methods We reported an unusual case report of a young, healthy man with a septic shock, severe dehydration with a hematocrit of 70.6% caused by gastrointestinal infection and refractory renal failure, and persistent polyuria. Results The patient presented severe dehydration, hypovolemic shock with a hematocrit of 70.6%, and acute renal failure. The subsequent laboratory exams demonstrated a gastrointestinal infection of Campylobacter Upsaliensis and Helicobacter pylori. The persistent renal failure and polyuria later 20 days made it mandatory for further investigations. A Magnetic brain Resonance excluded encephalic lesions but demonstrated a posterior pituitary lobe hypointense. Conclusions This cascade of pathological events seems originated from a septic shock: the consequent increase in hematocrit and blood viscosity, estimated double the normal, with severe hypotensive shock correlated, decelerated the microcirculatory blood flow, until a proper blood stasis in the venous system. These factors caused hypoxia and possible venous thromboses, electively affecting the pituitary hypothalamic nuclei and their axons in the post-hypophysis and its portal system.

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