Carr D B, Shih V E, Richter J M, Martin J B
Ann Neurol. 1982 Feb;11(2):195-7. doi: 10.1002/ana.410110216.
A 36-year-old man had one year of periodic symptoms suggestive of episodic hypothalamic dysfunction: hypersomnia, thirst, ravenous hunger and gorging behavior, pallor, and irritability. However, neuroendocrine testing proved normal. A mild transient acidosis at the onset of his attacks and a history of bowel bypass five years earlier prompted metabolic screening. Markedly increased urinary D-lactic and phenolic acids were present, as were intermittent elevations of plasma D-lactic acid during two symptomatic episodes. Prompt and sustained clinical remission coincided with disappearance of abnormal organic acid excretion during oral antibiotic therapy. D-Lactic acidosis must be considered in the differential diagnosis of otherwise unexplained neurological syndromes, particularly in patients with altered bowel anatomy.