TITLE:
Recurrent Hypoglycaemia in a Diabetic Patient Presented a Gastric Cancer: Think about Paraneoplastic Syndrome
AUTHORS:
Ruffin Randriamalala, Lovasoa Tika, Mampionona Ranaivomanana, Andriamiarimbola Irène Rakotoniaina, Florine Rafaramino, Andry Riel
KEYWORDS:
Extrapancreatic Tumors, Gastric Carcinoma, Hypoglycaemia, Paraneoplastic Syndrome
JOURNAL NAME:
Case Reports in Clinical Medicine,
Vol.8 No.7,
July
24,
2019
ABSTRACT: The hypoglycaemia paraneoplastic is uncommon in diabetic patients. Our aim was to report a case of paraneoplastic hypoglycaemia discovered after the diagnosis of gastric adenocarcinoma in a diabetic patient. A 65 years old man, was hospitalized for the management of acute digestive haemorrhage. In his medical history, he had diabetes since 20 years. He was alcoholic weaned for 3 years and had an unexplored repetitive epigastralgia. During his hospitalization, the exploration of acute digestive haemorrhage found a gastric adenocarcinoma with hepatic metastasis. At the 4th day of his hospitalization, he presented a hypoglycaemic coma with capillary blood glucose at 0.36 g/L. The patient was conscious after the infusion of Hypertonic Glucose Solution (HGS) 10%. After 3 days, the recurrent hypoglycaemia occurred and we intermittently treated by infusion of glucose solution 10%. The measurements of insulin level and C-peptide weren’t performed because they didn’t exist in the city. So, the notion of cancer and the recurrent hypoglycaemia even if we stopped the oral antidiabetic therapy make us think of a paraneoplastic syndrome. The chemotherapy associated with corticosteroid therapy is the standard treatment of the hypoglycaemia paraneoplastic but the patient refused the chemotherapy and we couldn’t use the corticosteroid therapy because of digestive haemorrhage. At the end of his hospitalization, he still had hypoglycaemia treated by infusion of glucose solution 10%. In the absence of means of diagnosis, we should think of paraneoplastic syndrome in front of recurrent hypoglycaemia and cancer in the diabetic patient.