Osmotic demyelination syndrome (ODS) is a life-threatening demyelinating syndrome. The association of ODS with hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state (HHS) has been seldom reported. The aim of this study was to present and discuss previous cases and the pathophysiological mechanisms involved in ODS secondary to HHS. A 47-year-old man arrived to the emergency room due to generalized tonic-clonic seizures and altered mental status. The patient was lethargic and had a Glasgow coma scale of 11/15, muscle strength was 4/5 in both lower extremities, and deep tendon reflexes were diminished. Glucose was 838 mg/dL; serum sodium and venous blood gas analyses were normal. Urinary and plasma ketones were negative. Brain magnetic resonance revealed increased signal intensity on T2-weighted FLAIR images with restricted diffusion on the medulla and central pons. Supportive therapy was started and during the next 3 weeks the patient progressively regained consciousness and muscle strength and was able to feed himself. At 6-month follow-up, the patient was asymptomatic and MRI showed no residual damage. In conclusion, the association of ODS with HHS is extremely rare. The exact mechanism by which HHS produces ODS still needs to be elucidated, but we favor a rapid hypertonic insult as the most plausible mechanism.
Tumour-induced osteomalacia (TIO), is a rare paraneoplasatic syndrome found in >95% of benign tumours that secrete fibroblast growth factor 23 - a phosphaturic circulating hormone. A rare case of a TIO secondary to a sarcoma, in a 21-year old man with history of bone fractures and distinctive physical and biochemical characteristics is presented and discussed.
The association of chronic tophaceous gout with severe hypercalcaemia is exceptional. In this case, a 42-year old man with a long-standing history of gout arrived at the emergency room with altered mental status. Laboratory work up revealed a uric acid of 14.0 mg/dl, corrected calcium of 14.5 mg/dl, phosphorous of 6.3 mg/dl, parathyroid hormone (PTH) was suppressed (<3.0 pg/ml), 25-dihydroxyvitamin D 25.2 ng/ml, parathyroid hormone related-protein (PTHrP) was 45.0 pg/ml and calcitriol 19.6 pg/ml. Biopsy histopathology result showed deposits of monosodium urate crystals surrounded by granulomatous inflammation. The association of chronic tophaceous gout with severe hypercalcaemia is extremely rare and has been usually described to be secondary to 1-25 dihydroxyvitamin D (calcitriol) secretion. In this case, calcitriol levels were normal and this possibility was excluded. On the other hand, PTHrP had never been, until now, described as the responsible cause of hypercalcaemia in gout. In our case, baseline PTHrP and calcium values were elevated and after medical treatment both returned to normal values. PTHrP usually causes hypophosphataemia and in this case the abnormal renal function could have diminished this last effect.
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