Soe May Zaw, Ching Kuan Ming, Teah Kai Ming, Lim Chew Har, Jamil Jabraan, Yeap Boon Tat
Department of Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universiti Malaysia Sabah, 88400, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia.
Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care, Penang General Hospital, 10990, Georgetown, Penang, Malaysia.
Ann Med Surg (Lond). 2022 Jun 28;79:104023. doi: 10.1016/j.amsu.2022.104023. eCollection 2022 Jul.
Alcoholic ketoacidosis (AKA) is a common reversible biochemical pathology arising from hyperketonaemia in patients with a history of chronic alcohol consumption. It is typically fatal when there is a delay in early recognition and management. A further complicating factor is that this condition is frequently confused with diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA).
This report presents the case study of an elderly Chinese man with a 40-year history of alcohol consumption. The patient presented with acute shortness of breath, generalised abdominal pain, and vomiting. Blood gas analysis indicated severe high anion gap metabolic acidosis (HAGMA) with elevated serum ketones and modest hyperglycaemia which was initially treated as diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA). A diagnosis of AKA was later made after obtaining a thorough history of his binge drinking. The patient subsequently responded well to thiamine and aggressive fluid resuscitation. This case highlights the importance of a well-documented patient history and in-depth knowledge of ketoacidosis.
AKA must be suspected in patients with a history of chronic alcohol consumption and dependence. The symptoms are non-specific such as abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea. The latter two result in malnutrition and starvation subsequently leading to hyperketonaemia, hypovolaemia and HAGMA. AKA should be clearly differentiated from DKA to prevent mismanagement. The mainstay of management of AKA is thiamine, fluid resuscitation and good sugar control to prevent Wernicke's encephalopathy.
A precise patient's medical history is crucial to prevent misdiagnosis. A non-diabetic patient with a history of chronic alcohol consumption who presents with severe HAGMA, hyperketonaemia and dysglycaemia should raise a clinical suspicion of AKA. Thiamine and judicious fluid resuscitation as well as electrolytes and malnutrition correction should be promptly initiated in patients with AKA. Good family, social support and rehabilitation programs are crucial to help patients with alcohol abuse.
酒精性酮症酸中毒(AKA)是一种常见的可逆性生化病理状态,发生于有慢性饮酒史的患者,由高酮血症引起。如果早期识别和处理延迟,通常会致命。另一个使情况复杂化的因素是,这种病症常与糖尿病酮症酸中毒(DKA)相混淆。
本报告介绍了一名有40年饮酒史的老年中国男性的病例研究。患者出现急性呼吸急促、全腹疼痛和呕吐。血气分析显示严重的高阴离子间隙代谢性酸中毒(HAGMA),血清酮升高,血糖轻度升高,最初被当作糖尿病酮症酸中毒(DKA)治疗。在详细了解其暴饮史后,后来诊断为AKA。患者随后对硫胺素和积极的液体复苏反应良好。该病例突出了详细记录患者病史以及对酮症酸中毒有深入了解的重要性。
有慢性饮酒史和酒依赖的患者必须怀疑患有AKA。其症状是非特异性的,如腹痛、恶心、呕吐和腹泻。后两者导致营养不良和饥饿,继而引起高酮血症、血容量不足和HAGMA。应将AKA与DKA明确区分,以防止处理不当。AKA治疗的主要方法是硫胺素、液体复苏和良好的血糖控制,以预防韦尼克脑病。
准确的患者病史对于防止误诊至关重要。一名有慢性饮酒史的非糖尿病患者,出现严重HAGMA、高酮血症和血糖异常,应引起临床对AKA的怀疑。对于AKA患者,应立即开始使用硫胺素、合理的液体复苏以及纠正电解质和营养不良。良好的家庭、社会支持和康复计划对于帮助酗酒患者至关重要。