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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
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Hypoglycaemia is a relatively common cause for referral of patients to the accident and emergency departments of hospitals but most of it is iatrogenic. Occasionally, however, hypoglycaemia is due to any one of up to a hundred different disorders. In some, hypoglycaemia is the cause of intermittent neuroglycopenic symptoms that lead to their referral to medical outpatients for investigation. Only the most important are discussed here. Hyperinsulinism due to abnormal beta-cell function is an uncommon but important cause of spontaneous hypoglycaemia. The diagnosis is suspected from the history of episodes of altered consciousness confirmed by demonstrating raised plasma insulin, C-peptide and proinsulin levels in peripheral blood in the presence of hypoglycaemia. Differentiation of the various causes of endogenous hyperinsulinism before surgery is difficult if not impossible and the low predictive value of most of the localizing techniques that are available makes them an additional and unnecessary cost, producing little clinical benefit. Hypoglycaemia caused by non-islet cell tumours (NICTH) is seemingly rarer than hyperinsulinism from insulinoma and tends to occur in older patients. The clinical features are similar to those of hyperinsulinism but laboratory investigation reveals appropriately depressed plasma insulin, C-peptide and proinsulin levels in the presence of hypoglycaemia. The plasma IGF-II:IGF-I ratio is characteristically high and the concentration of the E-domain of proIGF-II is raised. Autoimmune hypoglycaemia is more common in some countries than others and is most often due to autoantibodies to insulin (AIS). It may also be caused by autoantibodies to the insulin receptor and possibly to autoantibodies that are stimulatory to pancreatic beta-cells. Contrary to popular belief, idiopathic reactive hypoglycaemia is rare and only one of the possible causes of the postprandial syndrome. It is characterized by a low blood glucose concentration in blood collected during a spontaneous symptomatic episode but not at other times. Its cause is unknown. Other causes of hypoglycaemia include endocrinopathies of various kinds; sepsis including malaria; congestive cardiac failure; hepatic and renal insufficiencies; diverse inborn errors of metabolism; and exogenous toxins, of which alcohol is probably the commonest.
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PMID:Hypoglycaemia in the adult. 837 12

Hypoglycemia is a clinical and biological syndrome, caused by an abnormal decrease in plasma glucose levels to below 0.55 g/l (3.0 mmol/l). Hypoglycemia is responsible for non-specific signs and symptoms which should be noted in a particular pathological context, and for secretion of counterregulatory hormones (mainly glucagon and catecholamines). Difficulty in identifying the etiology is variable, based upon history and physical examination, and hormonal investigations or imaging procedures, according to the results. Drug-related hypoglycemia is the most frequent observed cause (mainly in insulin-treated diabetic patients, but many drugs may be involved), followed par toxicity (alcohol mainly). Tumor-induced hypoglycemia is secondary to inappropriate insulin secretion by a beta-cell pancreatic tumor (insulinoma), and, rarely to an extrapancreatic mesenchymal large tumor secreting IGF-II. Hypoglycemia is present in other diseases, such as hormonal deficiencies, hepatic, or renal failure, or acute cardiac insufficiency. Multifactorial hypoglycemia seems to be underdiagnosed, mainly in hospitalized, underfed older patients with severe disease or sepsis. Autoimmune hypoglycemia is rare, due to insulin or insulin-receptor autoantibodies. Reactive hypoglycemia is observed after gastrectomy, but true primitive hypoglycemia appears to be rare, with false excess diagnosis in the majority of the cases.
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PMID:Hypoglycemia in adults. 1063 72