Adv Exp Med Biol
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Hyponatremia is common in advanced heart failure and relates to the severity of the disease. Non-osmotic arginine vasopressin (AVP) release and biosynthesis have been shown to be increased during chronic cardiac failure (CHF) and baroreceptors pathways have been demonstrated to play a major role in this non-osmotic stimulation of AVP. Decreased cardiac output unloads the baroreceptors and activates the sympathetic nervous system, thus stimulating AVP through a separate pathway which overrides the osmotic pathway. ⋯ This AQP2 upregulation can be entirely suppressed by V2 receptor AVP antagonists paralleling the correction of the hyponatremia. Thus, non-osmotic release of AVP in CHF upregulates AQP2 water channels, enhances water reabsorption and causes hyponatremia. The V1, and perhaps the V2, receptor activation may also diminish cardiac function.