SAQ 434 – Paediatrics – hypoglycaemia with lactic acidosis
Model Answer
Paediatrics – hypoglycaemia with lactic acidosis.
a. Significant abnormalities
- Severe acidaemia with pH 7.10.
- Low bicarbonate at 11 mmol/L.
- Markedly elevated lactate at 8.8 mmol/L.
- Low pCO2 for a venous sample, suggesting respiratory compensation.
- Hypoglycaemia with glucose 1.8 mmol/L.
- Borderline high chloride at 110 mmol/L may contribute to the acidosis.
b. Acid-base disturbance
- Primary metabolic acidosis.
- Anion gap = Na – (Cl + HCO3) = 143 – (110 + 11) = 22 mmol/L, so there is an increased anion gap component.
- Lactate of 8.8 mmol/L explains much of the high anion gap metabolic acidosis.
- Expected pCO2 by Winter's formula is about 1.5 x 11 + 8 = 24.5 mmHg, plus or minus 2. The measured venous pCO2 is 37 mmHg, so compensation is less than expected and a concurrent respiratory acidosis or inadequate ventilatory compensation is possible.
- Hypoglycaemia is a separate critical abnormality requiring immediate treatment.
c. Differential diagnoses
- Hypoglycaemic seizure with secondary lactic acidosis.
- Sepsis or shock/hypoperfusion, although the absence of fever makes this less straightforward.
- Toxic ingestion, especially a combination such as sulfonylurea plus metformin, noting no single common ingestion perfectly explains the picture.
- Inborn error of metabolism or disorder of gluconeogenesis.
- Mitochondrial respiratory chain disorder.
- The original examiner noted this differential is clinically controversial and internally difficult to explain from the provided stem.
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