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Investigation and Causes of Spontaneous (Non-Diabetic) Hypoglycaemia in Adults: Pitfalls to Avoid

Although adult spontaneous (non-diabetic) hypoglycaemia is rare, its recognition is important for the preventative or curative treatment of the underlying cause. Establishing Whipple’s triad—low blood glucose, neuroglycopaenia and resolution of neuroglycopaenia on increasing blood glucose levels to...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Elghobashy, Maiar, Gama, Rousseau, Sulaiman, Raashda Ainuddin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10606153/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37892096
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13203275
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author Elghobashy, Maiar
Gama, Rousseau
Sulaiman, Raashda Ainuddin
author_facet Elghobashy, Maiar
Gama, Rousseau
Sulaiman, Raashda Ainuddin
author_sort Elghobashy, Maiar
collection PubMed
description Although adult spontaneous (non-diabetic) hypoglycaemia is rare, its recognition is important for the preventative or curative treatment of the underlying cause. Establishing Whipple’s triad—low blood glucose, neuroglycopaenia and resolution of neuroglycopaenia on increasing blood glucose levels to normal or above—is essential to verify hypoglycaemia. Awareness that hypoglycaemia may occur in severely ill patients is important for its prevention. Further investigation in such cases is unnecessary unless another cause of hypoglycaemia is suspected. Patients are often asymptomatic and normoglycaemic at review. Their history of medication, self-medication, access to hypoglycaemic drugs, alcohol use and comorbidity may provide aetiological clues. The investigation involves obtaining blood samples during symptoms for laboratory glucose measurement or provoking fasting or postprandial hypoglycaemia as directed by symptoms. If confirmed, insulin, c-peptide, proinsulin and beta-hydroxybutyrate are analysed in hypoglycaemic samples. These will classify hypoglycaemia due to non-ketotic hyperinsulinaemia, non-ketotic hypoinsulinaemia and ketotic hypoinsulinaemia, and direct investigations to identify the underlying cause. There are, however, many pitfalls that may mislabel healthy individuals as “hypoglycaemic” or misdiagnose treatable or preventable causes of spontaneous hypoglycaemia. Clinical acumen and appropriate investigations will mostly identify hypoglycaemia and its cause.
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spelling pubmed-106061532023-10-28 Investigation and Causes of Spontaneous (Non-Diabetic) Hypoglycaemia in Adults: Pitfalls to Avoid Elghobashy, Maiar Gama, Rousseau Sulaiman, Raashda Ainuddin Diagnostics (Basel) Review Although adult spontaneous (non-diabetic) hypoglycaemia is rare, its recognition is important for the preventative or curative treatment of the underlying cause. Establishing Whipple’s triad—low blood glucose, neuroglycopaenia and resolution of neuroglycopaenia on increasing blood glucose levels to normal or above—is essential to verify hypoglycaemia. Awareness that hypoglycaemia may occur in severely ill patients is important for its prevention. Further investigation in such cases is unnecessary unless another cause of hypoglycaemia is suspected. Patients are often asymptomatic and normoglycaemic at review. Their history of medication, self-medication, access to hypoglycaemic drugs, alcohol use and comorbidity may provide aetiological clues. The investigation involves obtaining blood samples during symptoms for laboratory glucose measurement or provoking fasting or postprandial hypoglycaemia as directed by symptoms. If confirmed, insulin, c-peptide, proinsulin and beta-hydroxybutyrate are analysed in hypoglycaemic samples. These will classify hypoglycaemia due to non-ketotic hyperinsulinaemia, non-ketotic hypoinsulinaemia and ketotic hypoinsulinaemia, and direct investigations to identify the underlying cause. There are, however, many pitfalls that may mislabel healthy individuals as “hypoglycaemic” or misdiagnose treatable or preventable causes of spontaneous hypoglycaemia. Clinical acumen and appropriate investigations will mostly identify hypoglycaemia and its cause. MDPI 2023-10-22 /pmc/articles/PMC10606153/ /pubmed/37892096 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13203275 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Elghobashy, Maiar
Gama, Rousseau
Sulaiman, Raashda Ainuddin
Investigation and Causes of Spontaneous (Non-Diabetic) Hypoglycaemia in Adults: Pitfalls to Avoid
title Investigation and Causes of Spontaneous (Non-Diabetic) Hypoglycaemia in Adults: Pitfalls to Avoid
title_full Investigation and Causes of Spontaneous (Non-Diabetic) Hypoglycaemia in Adults: Pitfalls to Avoid
title_fullStr Investigation and Causes of Spontaneous (Non-Diabetic) Hypoglycaemia in Adults: Pitfalls to Avoid
title_full_unstemmed Investigation and Causes of Spontaneous (Non-Diabetic) Hypoglycaemia in Adults: Pitfalls to Avoid
title_short Investigation and Causes of Spontaneous (Non-Diabetic) Hypoglycaemia in Adults: Pitfalls to Avoid
title_sort investigation and causes of spontaneous (non-diabetic) hypoglycaemia in adults: pitfalls to avoid
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10606153/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37892096
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13203275
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