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SAT-LB110 Sulfonylurea-Induced Hypoglycemia: To Use Octreotide or Not

Background: Sulfonylurea poisoning can cause sustained hypoglycemia refractory to intravenous dextrose. Traditional treatment for sulfonylurea induced hypoglycemia includes intravenous dextrose and glucagon as well as diazoxide in refractory cases. Octreotide is recommended for sulfonylurea poisonin...

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Autores principales: Romeu, Jose, Dodge, Hannah, Mears, Chad, Kozlow, Erin, Patel, Ravi, Vunnam, Rama, Bhatt, Dhirisha, Sahu, Nitasa, Golamari, Reshma, Jain, Rohit
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7209006/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.2092
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author Romeu, Jose
Dodge, Hannah
Mears, Chad
Kozlow, Erin
Patel, Ravi
Vunnam, Rama
Bhatt, Dhirisha
Sahu, Nitasa
Golamari, Reshma
Jain, Rohit
author_facet Romeu, Jose
Dodge, Hannah
Mears, Chad
Kozlow, Erin
Patel, Ravi
Vunnam, Rama
Bhatt, Dhirisha
Sahu, Nitasa
Golamari, Reshma
Jain, Rohit
author_sort Romeu, Jose
collection PubMed
description Background: Sulfonylurea poisoning can cause sustained hypoglycemia refractory to intravenous dextrose. Traditional treatment for sulfonylurea induced hypoglycemia includes intravenous dextrose and glucagon as well as diazoxide in refractory cases. Octreotide is recommended for sulfonylurea poisoning in adult and pediatric patients with laboratory evidence of hypoglycemia. Clinical Case: An 89 year-old female with chronic kidney disease stage III, hypothyroidism, and diabetes mellitus type II, hypertension who presented with intractable nausea and diarrhea. Patient had been taking cefdinir for an UTI the prior week. On CT scan of the abdomen, colitis was demonstrated. Clostridium Difficile Assay was positive. She was incidentally found to have profound hypoglycemia with a blood glucose level of 30 mg/dL. Patient had hypoglycemia unawareness. Despite receiving 4 ampules of dextrose 50%, glucose level did not significantly improve. In the ED, patient was afebrile and hemodynamically stable. Her labs were significant for a hyponatremia of 125 mmol/L with an acute kidney injury [AKI] (Cr 1.94 mg/dL from 1.5 mg/dL). Patient was placed initially on a dextrose 5% normal saline infusion, but glucose levels continued to decline after brief response. Due to poor IV access, internal jugular central line was placed and patient was placed on D10NS infusion with good glycemic response. Patient had taken sulfonylurea despite not eating appropriately for 2 days. After 24 hours on D10 normal saline infusion, patient was able to maintain normal to slightly hyperglycemic levels with consistent carbohydrate diet. Her nausea and diarrhea had considerably improved after starting vancomycin 125 mg every 6 hours. Sulfonyurea was indefinitely discontinued. Conclusion: Patients presenting with sulfonylurea induced hypoglycemia complicated by poor PO intake, AKI, and infection can be safely treated with supportive measures like proper hydration, and dextrose infusion medication is appropriately metabolized by body without the need for octreotide infusion. References:Glatstein M, Scolnik D, Bentur Y. Octreotide forthe treatment of sulfonylurea poisoning.Clin Toxicol (Phila). 2012 Nov;50(9):795-804. doi:10.3109/15563650.2012.734626. Epub 2012 Oct 10.
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spelling pubmed-72090062020-05-13 SAT-LB110 Sulfonylurea-Induced Hypoglycemia: To Use Octreotide or Not Romeu, Jose Dodge, Hannah Mears, Chad Kozlow, Erin Patel, Ravi Vunnam, Rama Bhatt, Dhirisha Sahu, Nitasa Golamari, Reshma Jain, Rohit J Endocr Soc Diabetes Mellitus and Glucose Metabolism Background: Sulfonylurea poisoning can cause sustained hypoglycemia refractory to intravenous dextrose. Traditional treatment for sulfonylurea induced hypoglycemia includes intravenous dextrose and glucagon as well as diazoxide in refractory cases. Octreotide is recommended for sulfonylurea poisoning in adult and pediatric patients with laboratory evidence of hypoglycemia. Clinical Case: An 89 year-old female with chronic kidney disease stage III, hypothyroidism, and diabetes mellitus type II, hypertension who presented with intractable nausea and diarrhea. Patient had been taking cefdinir for an UTI the prior week. On CT scan of the abdomen, colitis was demonstrated. Clostridium Difficile Assay was positive. She was incidentally found to have profound hypoglycemia with a blood glucose level of 30 mg/dL. Patient had hypoglycemia unawareness. Despite receiving 4 ampules of dextrose 50%, glucose level did not significantly improve. In the ED, patient was afebrile and hemodynamically stable. Her labs were significant for a hyponatremia of 125 mmol/L with an acute kidney injury [AKI] (Cr 1.94 mg/dL from 1.5 mg/dL). Patient was placed initially on a dextrose 5% normal saline infusion, but glucose levels continued to decline after brief response. Due to poor IV access, internal jugular central line was placed and patient was placed on D10NS infusion with good glycemic response. Patient had taken sulfonylurea despite not eating appropriately for 2 days. After 24 hours on D10 normal saline infusion, patient was able to maintain normal to slightly hyperglycemic levels with consistent carbohydrate diet. Her nausea and diarrhea had considerably improved after starting vancomycin 125 mg every 6 hours. Sulfonyurea was indefinitely discontinued. Conclusion: Patients presenting with sulfonylurea induced hypoglycemia complicated by poor PO intake, AKI, and infection can be safely treated with supportive measures like proper hydration, and dextrose infusion medication is appropriately metabolized by body without the need for octreotide infusion. References:Glatstein M, Scolnik D, Bentur Y. Octreotide forthe treatment of sulfonylurea poisoning.Clin Toxicol (Phila). 2012 Nov;50(9):795-804. doi:10.3109/15563650.2012.734626. Epub 2012 Oct 10. Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7209006/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.2092 Text en © Endocrine Society 2020. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Diabetes Mellitus and Glucose Metabolism
Romeu, Jose
Dodge, Hannah
Mears, Chad
Kozlow, Erin
Patel, Ravi
Vunnam, Rama
Bhatt, Dhirisha
Sahu, Nitasa
Golamari, Reshma
Jain, Rohit
SAT-LB110 Sulfonylurea-Induced Hypoglycemia: To Use Octreotide or Not
title SAT-LB110 Sulfonylurea-Induced Hypoglycemia: To Use Octreotide or Not
title_full SAT-LB110 Sulfonylurea-Induced Hypoglycemia: To Use Octreotide or Not
title_fullStr SAT-LB110 Sulfonylurea-Induced Hypoglycemia: To Use Octreotide or Not
title_full_unstemmed SAT-LB110 Sulfonylurea-Induced Hypoglycemia: To Use Octreotide or Not
title_short SAT-LB110 Sulfonylurea-Induced Hypoglycemia: To Use Octreotide or Not
title_sort sat-lb110 sulfonylurea-induced hypoglycemia: to use octreotide or not
topic Diabetes Mellitus and Glucose Metabolism
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7209006/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.2092
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