Cases reported "Dumping Syndrome"

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1/4. Reactive hypoglycaemia due to late dumping syndrome: successful treatment with acarbose.

    Reactive hypoglycaemia is a rare disease which occurs postprandially in everyday life involving blood glucose levels below 2.5 to 2.8 mmol/l. We report on a 66-year-old patient who developed symptomatic reactive hypoglycaemia due to late dumping syndrome 10 years after oesophagectomy with cervical anastomosis. A 75 g sucrose load revealed a plasma glucose level of 9.4 mmol/l after one hour, followed by symptomatic hypoglycaemia with a plasma glucose level of 1.8 mmol/l after three hours. Concomitantly, high concentrations of insulin (3216 pmol/l at a glucose level of 9.4 mmol/l and 335 pmol/l at a glucose level of 1.8 mmol/l) and glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) (375 pmol/l at a glucose level of 9.4 mmol/l and 85 pmol/l at a glucose level of 1.8 mmol/l) were measured. While the patient was under treatment with acarbose, another sucrose load did not provoke symptomatic hypoglycaemia (plasma glucose nadir of 4.6 mmol/l after two hours). insulin and GLP-1 levels increased much less, to peak levels of 375 pmol/l and 75 pmol/l respectively, after one hour when plasma glucose was 6.8 mmol/l. We conclude that in patients with reactive hypoglycaemia due to gastrointestinal surgery, acarbose decreases rapid glucose absorption associated with hyperglycaemia and GLP-1 secretion, and thus diminishes excessive insulin release. acarbose is therefore a successful treatment modality for reactive hypoglycaemia due to late dumping syndrome.
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keywords = hypoglycaemia
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2/4. Severe hypoglycaemia post-gastric bypass requiring partial pancreatectomy: evidence for inappropriate insulin secretion and pancreatic islet hyperplasia.

    AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Postprandial hypoglycaemia following gastric bypass for obesity is considered a late manifestation of the dumping syndrome and can usually be managed with dietary modification. We investigated three patients with severe postprandial hypoglycaemia and hyperinsulinaemia unresponsive to diet, octreotide and diazoxide with the aim of elucidating the pathological mechanisms involved. methods: Glucose, insulin, and c-peptide were measured in the fasting and postprandial state, and insulin secretion was assessed following selective intra-arterial calcium injection. pancreas histopathology was assessed in all three patients. RESULTS: All three patients had evidence of severe postprandial hyperinsulinaemia and hypoglycaemia. In one patient, reversal of gastric bypass was ineffective in reversing hypoglycaemia. All three patients ultimately required partial pancreatectomy for control of neuroglycopenia; pancreas pathology of all patients revealed diffuse islet hyperplasia and expansion of beta cell mass. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: These findings suggest that gastric bypass-induced weight loss may unmask an underlying beta cell defect or contribute to pathological islet hyperplasia, perhaps via glucagon-like peptide 1-mediated pathways.
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ranking = 0.8
keywords = hypoglycaemia
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3/4. Long-term symptomatic relief of postprandial hypoglycaemia following gastric surgery with a somatostatin analogue.

    somatostatin has been shown to be effective in the management of the dumping syndrome and there have been reports of the effective use of long acting somatostatin analogue in the management of this condition. However, there have been few reports of the prolonged use of a somatostatin analogue in the late dumping syndrome. We describe a patient in whom this management provided good long term symptomatic relief which was confirmed biochemically.
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ranking = 0.4
keywords = hypoglycaemia
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4/4. dumping syndrome after Nissen fundoplication.

    dumping syndrome is infrequently reported in children, but has significant morbidity. It may be difficult both to diagnose and manage. Two children are reported who developed dumping syndrome after Nissen fundoplication. Symptoms occurred soon after the operation and included post-prandial pallor, sweating, lethargy and diarrhoea. failure to thrive was a prominent feature. Typical biochemical changes included hyperglycaemia shortly after meals, followed by hyperinsulinaemia and reactive hypoglycaemia. Effective treatment was only achieved with continuous enteral feeding. Children undergoing fundoplication should be closely monitored for episodes of hypoglycaemia and unresponsiveness. The incidence of dumping syndrome after fundoplication may be underestimated, particularly in children.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = hypoglycaemia
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