Cases reported "Hypoglycemia"

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1/397. Hypoglycaemia associated with a solitary fibrous tumour of the pleura.

    We report the interesting case of an elderly woman who presented with hypoglycaemic episodes and weight loss. She was found to have a solitary fibrous tumour weighing more than 1.7 kg arising from the diaphragmatic pleura, which had been producing insulin-like growth factor ii. After surgical removal of this well-encapsulated, pedunculated tumour her hypoglycaemia resolved and she returned to normal both clinically and biochemically.
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ranking = 1
keywords = hypoglycaemia
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2/397. Treatment of hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia with nifedipine.

    We report on two children with mild persistent hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia. In both, oral nifedipine treatment (0.7 and 2.0 mg/kg per day respectively) had a significant clinical effect. In one case, nifedipine monotherapy prevented hypoglycaemia; in the second case, the dosage and the side-effects of other substances could be reduced, thus circumventing surgical therapy. CONCLUSION: nifedipine treatment has a favourable effect on the clinical course of patients with mild hyperinsulinism. It represents a valuable new substance for the treatment of this disorder.
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ranking = 6.074941405569
keywords = hypoglycaemia, hyperinsulinism
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3/397. Recurrent hypoglycaemia in multiple myeloma: a case of munchausen syndrome by proxy in an elderly patient.

    A 73-year-old woman with multiple myeloma experienced four episodes of loss of consciousness, convulsions and profuse sweating whilst she was in the hospital. A thorough investigation in the department of medicine disclosed that with each attack, she had a serum glucose < 1.6 mM L-1, insulin level > 1400 pMol L-1 (N- < 150) and a normal level of serum c-peptide. Since she had no anti-insulin antibodies (which may rarely exist in multiple myeloma), a diagnosis of exogenous injection of insulin was made. A search for a possible perpetrator discovered that the patient had a daughter who was a surgical nurse and who was genuinely concerned whenever she was told that her mother was about to be discharged from the hospital. If she was the perpetrator in the present case, then it is possible that the motive for such an action was to postpone the mother's discharge from hospital. This case is an example of a 'factitious disease by proxy' in an elderly patient. The aim of the present report is to alert the medical personnel to the possibility that Munchausen's syndrome by proxy may also occur in the elderly.
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ranking = 4
keywords = hypoglycaemia
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4/397. Hypoglycaemia induced by adrenal gland neoplasia (Anderson's syndrome) : report of a case.

    A patient with hypoglycaemia associated with an adrenal neoplasia (Anderson's syndrome) is reported. Endocrinological investigation showed increased secretion of cortisol and catecholamines as well as an increased urinary steroid excretion along with profound inhibition of both basal and stimulated insulin secretion. During IVGTT, Conard's coefficient was reduced. The hyperglycemic response to glucagon injection was blunted, suggesting that liver glycogen stores were decreased or unavailable.
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ranking = 1
keywords = hypoglycaemia
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5/397. Preoperative hypoglycaemia, propranolol and the Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome.

    The Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome is an autosomal recessive trait characterized by deafness and electrocardiographic changes. These changes include prolongation of the QT interval and T-wave inversion. Treatment may include the use of beta-blockers to prevent the development of malignant ventricular arrhythmias and sudden death. We report a patient with this syndrome, who was receiving propranolol orally and who became hypoglycaemic during the preoperative fasting period prior to cochlear implantation.
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ranking = 4
keywords = hypoglycaemia
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6/397. Anesthetic considerations of two sisters with beckwith-wiedemann syndrome.

    Anesthetic considerations of 21-mo-old and 4-yr-old sisters with beckwith-wiedemann syndrome during surgical repair of cleft palate and reduction of macroglossia are presented and discussed. This syndrome is characterized by exomphalos, macroglossia, gigantism, hypoglycemia in infancy, and many other clinical features. This syndrome is also known as exomphalos, macroglossia, and gigantism (EMG) syndrome. Principal problems associated with anesthetic management in this syndrome are hypoglycemia and macroglossia. Careful intraoperative plasma glucose monitoring is particularly important to prevent the neurologic sequelae of unrecognized hypoglycemia. It is expected that airway management would be complicated by the macroglossia, which might cause difficult bag/mask ventilation and endotracheal intubation following the induction of anesthesia and muscle paralysis, so preparations for airway difficulty (e.g., awake vocal cord inspection) should be considered before induction. A nasopharyngeal airway is useful in relieving postoperative airway obstruction.
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ranking = 3.9205931950972E-6
keywords = infancy
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7/397. Hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia associated with persistent hyperammonaemia.

    Two cases of hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia associated with persistent hyperammonaemia in unrelated infants of 7 days and 4 months of age are reported. Blood ammonia levels were 100-300 micromol/l (normal values <40 micromol/l). The hyperammonaemia was asymptomatic and not associated with any of the abnormalities of amino acids or organic acids observed in urea cycle enzyme defects. Orotic aciduria was normal. The hyperammonaemia was not influenced by the levels of blood glucose nor by subtotal pancreatectomy. On admission blood glucose was ca. 1.2 mmol/l (21.6 mg/dl) corresponding to blood insulin levels of 35 and 22 mU/l respectively in both infants. Continuous intravenous glucose perfusion was necessary to prevent hypoglycaemia. Furthermore 2-oxoglutaric acid in urine was increased in the second infant to 3.15 mg/mg creatinine (normal 0.41 /-0.12). This may point to mutations in the glutamate dehydrogenase gene. CONCLUSION: 2-Oxoglutaric aciduria may be an important clue to the diagnose in this syndrome.
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ranking = 6
keywords = hypoglycaemia
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8/397. Evaluation of serum markers of neuronal damage following severe hypoglycaemia in adults with insulin-treated diabetes mellitus.

    BACKGROUND: Neurone-specific enolase (NSE) and protein s-100 (S-100) may be used as markers of acute neuronal damage in humans with neurological disorders. METHOD: To evaluate their use following a single episode of severe hypoglycaemia (defined as an episode requiring external assistance to aid recovery), serum concentrations of NSE and S-100 were measured following hypoglycaemia which had not caused persistent neurological impairment in 16 patients with insulin-treated diabetes (the 'hypo' subjects), and in three diabetic patients who died following severe hypoglycaemia. The serum proteins were also measured in 10 subjects with insulin-treated diabetes who had not experienced an episode of severe hypoglycaemia within the preceding year (the 'control' subjects). RESULTS: No differences in serum concentrations of NSE and S-100 were observed between the 'control' and the 'hypo' subjects at either 36 hours or seven days after the episode of severe hypoglycaemia (p>0.05). However, in two of the three subjects who died following hypoglycaemia, serum concentrations of the markers were markedly elevated. CONCLUSIONS: Any neuronal injury occurring during severe hypoglycaemia that is not associated with persistent neurological deficit is insufficient to provoke elevation of these serum markers. However, the measurement of serum concentrations of NSE and S-100 may have a prognostic role in evaluating clinical outcome following severe hypoglycaemia which is associated with neurological damage.
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ranking = 12
keywords = hypoglycaemia
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9/397. Brainstem dysfunction in chiari malformation presenting as profound hypoglycemia: presentation of four cases, review of the literature, and conjecture as to mechanism.

    OBJECTIVE: We report four patients whose cases resulted in our observation that profound hypoglycemia resulting from intermittent hyperinsulinism plays a significant role in patients with brainstem dysfunction from Chiari I or II malformations who have intermittent autonomic dysfunction ("blue spells"). methods: The records of four children with severe brainstem dysfunction associated with hindbrain herniation (Chiari I or II malformation) were reviewed retrospectively. Each patient had severe lower cranial nerve dysfunction that required tracheotomy and feeding tube placement. After we found that profound hypoglycemia had occurred during a spell of autonomic dysfunction in one patient, the charts of the other three patients were reviewed for evidence of hypoglycemia. Now, whenever one of them has evidence of autonomic dysfunction, prospective studies of glucose and insulin levels are performed. Three of the patients had Chiari II malformation in association with myelomeningocele, and one patient had a Chiari I malformation resulting from Pfeiffer's syndrome. RESULTS: hypoglycemia occurred in these patients episodically, and usually when their shunts were functioning. The hypoglycemia was associated with hyperinsulinemia in each patient. The brainstem structures of these children (presumably the dorsal motor nuclei of the vagus) were extremely sensitive to changes in local or regional intracranial pressure. These changes were triggered by intermittent shunt failure, agitation from pain, abdominal distention from constipation, and retention of CO2. In patients with Chiari malformations, even mild increases in intracranial pressure lead to brainstem dysfunction. One possible explanation is that pressure on the deformed Xth cranial nerve nuclei may lead to insulin release and life-threatening hypoglycemia. Continuous-drip feeds are necessary to prevent this complication. CONCLUSION: patients with severe intermittent brainstem dysfunction after decompression of Chiari I or Chiari II malformations should have laboratory studies of glucose levels performed at the time of the episodes to rule out hypoglycemia.
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ranking = 0.10511592308972
keywords = hyperinsulinism, hyperinsulinemia
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10/397. hemiplegia hypoglycaemia syndrome.

    We report the case of a 83-year-old man who presented to the emergency department with hypoglycaemia resembling a cerebrovascular accident. Hypoglycaemic hemiparesis is an under-recognized manifestation of hypoglycaemia. If not recognized and treated promptly, hypoglycaemia may cause irreversible central nervous system injury; it rarely results in death. It is imperative that emergency physicians consider hypoglycaemia in all patients with coma in spite of focal neurological deficit even when the findings seem to be explained initially by other aetiologies.
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ranking = 8
keywords = hypoglycaemia
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