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Severe Metabolic Acidemia After Augmentation Enterocystoplasty: Clinical Case

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Bibliographic Details
Summary:Hyperchloremic acidosis is a late frequent complication of augmentation ileocystoplasty, but only rarely patients develop symptomatic acidemia. A 64-year-old woman, with history of augmentation ileocystoplasty three months before, was admitted in the emergency department complaining of fatigue, abdominal pain, nausea and vomits. Analytical evaluation presented an elevation of the inflammatory parameters, renal dysfunction and a slight elevation of serum amylase and lipase, as well as severe hyperchloremic acidemia. The first diagnosis hypothesis was thought to be acute pancreatitis. However, attending to the differential diagnosis of metabolic acidemia with normal anion gap and due to bicarbonate loss, the hypothesis of acidemia after ileocystoplasty was more consistent. Treatment with endovenous and oral bicarbonate was instituted and clinical and analytical improvement were observed. It is essential to foresee the metabolic complications of this procedure and consider all possible diagnoses in order to diagnose and treat early, preventing associated morbidity.
Main Authors:Frutuoso,Beatriz
Other Authors:Moreira,Helena; Torres-Ramalho,Paulo; Lopes,Luís
Subject:Acidosis Urinary Bladder/surgery
Year:2017
Country:Portugal
Document type:report
Access type:open access
Associated institution:Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia
Language:English
Origin:SciELO Portugal
Description
Summary:Hyperchloremic acidosis is a late frequent complication of augmentation ileocystoplasty, but only rarely patients develop symptomatic acidemia. A 64-year-old woman, with history of augmentation ileocystoplasty three months before, was admitted in the emergency department complaining of fatigue, abdominal pain, nausea and vomits. Analytical evaluation presented an elevation of the inflammatory parameters, renal dysfunction and a slight elevation of serum amylase and lipase, as well as severe hyperchloremic acidemia. The first diagnosis hypothesis was thought to be acute pancreatitis. However, attending to the differential diagnosis of metabolic acidemia with normal anion gap and due to bicarbonate loss, the hypothesis of acidemia after ileocystoplasty was more consistent. Treatment with endovenous and oral bicarbonate was instituted and clinical and analytical improvement were observed. It is essential to foresee the metabolic complications of this procedure and consider all possible diagnoses in order to diagnose and treat early, preventing associated morbidity.