Additional autoimmunity represents a significant comorbidity in patients with T1D. Autoimmune diseases are more common in Caucasians and in women, and increase with age. Clinicians treating patients with T1D should be aware of the risk factors for additional autoimmune diseases.
suggests that NGS platforms, academic or commercially available, would also improve their detection rate by capturing the full breadth of variants that have been identified.
Reported is a case of a 39-year-old Caucasian man who presented to the emergency department with sudden onset bilateral lower extremity paralysis after consuming a large amount of carbohydrates and alcohol. A CT, MRI, and lumbar puncture were performed with negative results; lab results showed hyperthyroidism and hypokalemia. The patient was diagnosed with thyrotoxic periodic paralysis. In a patient presenting with sudden onset paralysis and hypokalemia, the emergency physician should include thyrotoxic periodic paralysis in the differential diagnosis and focus on treating and working up the hypokalemia instead of the paralysis.
Muscle relaxants are commonly prescribed in the United States but may have deleterious side effects that are unrecognized by physicians. Here, we report a 55-year-old Caucasian man who developed pancreatitis and a subsequent hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state after being prescribed tizanidine. The patient had untreated hypertriglyceridemia, unbeknownst to the prescribing physician. While hypertriglyceridemia is a widely understood risk factor for pancreatitis, its incidence with tizanidine is not. As an alpha-2 agonist, tizanidine slows gastrointestinal motility by inhibiting gastrointestinal smooth muscle contraction, which could lead to ileus which occurred in this patient. Alpha-2 agonists further contract the hepato-pancreatic sphincter, which may result in obstruction of pancreatic enzyme flow via the pancreatic duct. This patient’s case of pancreatitis was precipitated by 2 factors: (i) his use of tizanidine and (ii) hypertriglyceridemia. This case demonstrates that patients presenting with severe hypertriglyceridemia, or other potential risk factors for pancreatitis, should not be prescribed tizanidine.
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