X

Consumer Privacy Notice

Visit the St. Elizabeth Healthcare Privacy Policy and St. Elizabeth Physician's Privacy Policy for details regarding the categories of personal information collected through St. Elizabeth website properties and the organizational purpose(s) for which the information will be used to improve your digital consumer/patient experience. We do not sell or rent personally-identifying information collected.

Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus

Updated: 2023-03-07


Overview

Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus starts with a problem in the kidneys. This keeps the body from responding properly to a hormone called ADH. Too much urine is made as a result. A disorder that's passed down in families or a long-term kidney problem can cause nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. So can medicines such as lithium or antiviral drugs.

Symptoms

Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus is one type of diabetes insipidus. Diabetes insipidus causes the body to make large amounts of pale urine. The need to urinate may happen often at night. The disease also can cause extreme thirst, even after a person has something to drink.

Treatments

Treatment for nephrogenic diabetes insipidus may involve lifestyle changes. These changes could include eating a low-salt diet and drinking more water. Medicine also may be prescribed to help the body make less urine. Some medicines can cause symptoms of nephrogenic diabetes. These may need to be stopped with help from a health care provider.