Cases reported "Acidosis, Lactic"

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1/10. survival from profound alcohol-related lactic acidosis.

    We present the case of a patient with profound alcohol-related lactic acidosis (lactate = 16.1 mmol/L; pH = 6.67) associated with a multitude of metabolic derangements who made a remarkable recovery following aggressive management. The patient was in extremis upon arrival in the emergency department (ED), and resuscitation was begun immediately. While in the ED, the problem list generated included: acute alcohol intoxication, severe lactic acidosis, dehydration, hypothermia, hypoglycemia, acute renal insufficiency, and hepatic failure. resuscitation continued in the intensive care unit with remarkable improvement and satisfactory outcome. In this patient, the severe lactic acidosis and associated abnormalities were all attributed to acute and chronic effects of ethanol. A brief summary of the proposed mechanism by which these metabolic derangements developed and an outline of her management follows.
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keywords = intoxication
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2/10. D-lactic acidosis 23 years after jejuno-ileal bypass.

    Accumulation of D-lactate after gastrointestinal surgery, particularly jejuno-ileal bypass, is an uncommon and often misdiagnosed clinical disturbance. The syndrome may be complicated by dizziness, ataxia, confusion, headache, memory loss, and aggressive behavior. serum chemistries are often deceptive because the anion gap is frequently normal in spite of severe metabolic acidosis. Moreover, the urine anion gap may be positive, incorrectly suggesting a defect in renal net acid excretion. Indeed, the combination of a normal anion gap metabolic acidosis and positive urine anion gap may erroneously suggest a diagnosis of renal tubular acidosis. Importantly, all reported cases of D-lactic acidosis secondary to bypass surgery have been encountered within 5 to 10 years following the surgery. Here we present an unusual case of D-lactic acidosis (complicated by encephalopathy) presenting 23 years after a jejuno-ileal bypass procedure. The patient was initially diagnosed with a drug intoxication secondary to benzodiazepines. Ultimately, the diagnosis of D-lactate encephalopathy was established after challenging the patient with a carbohydrate load. Thus, administration of 40 kcal/kg over 16 hours reproduced the clinical syndrome and was accompanied by a marked increment in serum and urine D-lactate concentration. The patient had sustained resolution of her symptoms after treatment with oral vancomycin.
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keywords = intoxication
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3/10. Cardiac asystole after mouthwash ingestion: a case report and review of the contents.

    In the search for intoxication, alcoholic patients often ingest toxic alcohols or other products containing ethanol. We report a patient who presented with intoxication from Listerine and rapidly progressed to cardiac asystole. Several mouthwash products have a high concentration of ethanol and are easily obtained. We review the contents of this product and their possible toxicologic effects.
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ranking = 2
keywords = intoxication
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4/10. An inherited metabolic disorder presenting as ethylene glycol intoxication in a young adult.

    Despite the abundance of reports emerging in the literature on metabolic disorders, some disorders remain undiagnosed or misdiagnosed, not only in clinical pathology but also in forensic pathology. The authors report a patient who had recurrent episodes characterized by nausea, vomiting, and signs of dehydration necessitating admission to the hospital. At each admission, he was found to have lactic acidosis. On the first admission, glycolic acid was detected in his blood and he was diagnosed as having ethylene glycol intoxication. Only at the third admission, 2 years after the first, was the possibility of an underlying metabolic disorder considered. Laboratory investigations showed a deficiency of complex I in the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. Possible medicolegal implications are discussed.
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ranking = 5
keywords = intoxication
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5/10. metformin-associated lactic acidosis and acute renal failure in a type 2 diabetic patient.

    metformin belongs to a class of drugs known as the biguanides that are widely used in the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Its association with lactic acidosis is well established, although rare. metformin-associated lactic acidosis is recognized as a potentially lethal condition that can occur in patients with contraindications to the drug, such as renal dysfunction, liver diseases, alcoholism, and cardiopulmonary diseases. In these cases, the plasma concentration of metformin is not necessarily abnormally high. We describe a 75-year-old diabetic woman with acute renal failure and life-threatening lactic acidosis due to metformin intoxication. Clinical manifestations included vomiting, diarrhea, hypothermia, hypotension and transitory blindness. Her initial renal function was recovered after hemodialysis and she was discharged 3 months after admission.
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6/10. Severe metformin intoxication with lactic acidosis in an adolescent.

    A 15-year-old healthy girl ingested 38.25 g (0.55 g/kg body weight) of metformin in a suicide attempt. Subsequently she developed lactic acidosis and moderate renal failure. An initial session of haemodialysis was able to treat the acidosis and reduce the toxic level of metformin. Nevertheless, a further increase in serum lactate was observed during and after the first dialysis treatment. A second session of haemodialysis was started 5 h after the end of the first session and resulted in a lowering of the lactate level and an almost total elimination of metformin. During the further clinical course, reversible acute renal failure with a maximum creatinine of 2.4 mg/dl was observed. CONCLUSION: Despite sufficient haemodialysis, the production of lactate can be greater than the elimination in the case of severe metformin intoxication. Therefore haemodialysis should be continued even in the situation of rising lactate levels during the treatment.
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ranking = 5
keywords = intoxication
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7/10. Pronounced metabolic response to modest theophylline overdose.

    OBJECTIVE: To describe a patient who developed significant metabolic abnormalities in response to a low-level theophylline ingestion. CASE SUMMARY: An 18-year-old man was examined after ingesting theophylline 3 g in a suicide attempt. Although his peak theophylline concentration was 157 mumol/L (28.2 micrograms/mL), it was associated with significant leukocytosis, hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, hypophosphatemia, hyperglycemia, and lactic acidosis. These abnormalities have been previously associated with theophylline intoxication, but only in conjunction with much higher peak concentrations of theophylline. CONCLUSIONS: Significant metabolic abnormalities can occur with suicidal ingestion of relatively small amounts of theophylline. The presence of these abnormalities should be sought in theophylline overdoses. In the proper clinical circumstances, such abnormalities should raise suspicion of covert theophylline ingestion.
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keywords = intoxication
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8/10. Lactic acidosis and hypoglycemia in a patient with high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and elevated circulating TNF-alpha.

    A 71-year-old patient with high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma stage IVB, severe lactic acidosis and tumor-associated hypoglycemia is described. Endocrine causes of hypoglycemic episodes were excluded because of low serum concentrations of insulin and "insulin-like growth factor 1", and normal concentrations of growth hormone and thyroid hormone. Clinical conditions associated with lactic acidosis such as diabetes mellitus, biguanide intoxication, septicemia, acute hypoxemia, or circulatory insufficiency were ruled out. Enhanced glucose metabolism within the tumor was visualized by positron emission tomography employing 2-fluro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG) as a tracer. A markedly elevated tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) level was found which decreased after cytoreductive therapy paralleling the normalization of serum lactate. In contrast to the majority of cases of lymphoma-associated lactic acidoses reviewed to date, in our case lactate elimination was not reduced.
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keywords = intoxication
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9/10. Serial imaging of bilateral striatal necrosis associated with acidaemia in adults.

    Bilateral striatal necrosis in acute encephalopathy has been reported in a small number of adults with methanol or cyanide intoxication, hypoxic encephalopathy or haemolytic-uraemic syndrome. Acute encephalopathy with bilateral striatal necrosis has been reported in infants and children. However, the pathogenesis of the necrosis remains unclear. This is the first report of serial imaging from the very early to chronic stage in two acute encephalopathic adults with bilateral striatal necrosis. A clinicoradiological study is presented for clarification of the pathological process and pathogenesis. Striatal lesions were not detected in the very early stages, but only thereafter. Serial studies suggested that the lesions were caused by delayed neuronal death. These patients had severe lactic acidosis, near the limit for survival. There have been few reports of adults with acute encephalopathy and bilateral striatal necrosis in whom arterial pH was described; all these exhibited marked acidosis. The common pathophysiological condition among these encephalopathies with bilateral striatal necrosis could be lactic acidosis elicited by impairment of ATP generation through the Krebs cycle. The striatum might represent one of the target areas of Krebs-cycle blockade.
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ranking = 1
keywords = intoxication
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10/10. Triphasic waves associated with acute naproxen overdose: a case report.

    Triphasic waves (TWs) can be recorded on EEG in the course of several metabolic disorders, mainly hepatic encephalopathy. A case of acute encephalopathy due to naproxen intoxication is reported, in the course of which diffuse, bilateral and symmetrical TWs were recorded. Biochemical mechanisms that might determine both a complex encephalopathy and TWs are discussed.
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keywords = intoxication
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