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Published Online: May 1991

A Rational Approach to Disorders of Water Balance in Psychiatric Patients

Abstract

Many mentally ill patients, particularly those with schizophrenia, have idiopathic or medication-induced disorders of water balance, which include excessive water intake, excessive water excretion, and impaired water excretion. Patients with these disorders manifest polydipsia and polyuria with or without symptomatic hyponatremia (low serum sodium concentration). Other serious sequelae include life-threatening water intoxication. The author reviews the physiology of normal water balance and the mechanism, causes, clinical presentation, and diagnosis of disorders of water balance. Interventions must first focus on identifying reversible factors. Medication-induced water imbalance can usually be reversed without compromising treatment of the underlying psychiatric disorder. A fully effective treatment for idiopathic polydipsia has not been found, although providing optimal treatment for the underlying psychiatric disorder often helps. Monitoring changes in body weight, in conjunction with measures of serum sodium, prevents water intoxication.

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Go to Psychiatric Services
Go to Psychiatric Services
Psychiatric Services
Pages: 488 - 494

History

Published in print: May 1991
Published online: 1 April 2006

Authors

Affiliations

Morris B. Goldman
Department of psychiatry at the Pritzker School of Medicine at the University of Chicago; University of Chicago research program at the Illinois State Psychiatric Institute in Chicago; Elgin (Ill.) Mental Health Center

Notes

Address correspondence to him at the Department of Psychiatry, Box 411, University of Chicago Medical Center, 5841 South Maryland, Chicago, IIlinois 60637

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