Sakai Norihiro, Hirose Yasuo, Sato Nobuhiro, Kondo Daisuke, Shimada Yuko, Hori Yasushi
The Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Niigata City General Hospital, Japan.
Intern Med. 2016;55(10):1315-7. doi: 10.2169/internalmedicine.55.5786. Epub 2016 May 15.
A 16-year-old man was transferred to our emergency department seven hours after ingesting 486 aspirin tablets. His blood salicylate level was 83.7 mg/dL. He was treated with fluid resuscitation and sodium bicarbonate infusion, and his condition gradually improved, with a decline in the blood salicylate level. However, eight days after admission, he again reported nausea, a venous blood gas revealed metabolic acidosis with a normal anion gap. The blood salicylate level was undetectable, and a urinalysis showed glycosuria, proteinuria and elevated beta-2 microglobulin and n-acetyl glucosamine levels, with a normal urinary pH despite the acidosis. We diagnosed him with relapse of metabolic acidosis caused by renal tubular acidosis.