A histopathologically diagnosed case of hypoglycemic encephalopathy due to insulin overdose

A 70-year-old man presented with cardiopulmonary arrest. Previous medical history included orally medicated diabetes mellitus, hypertension, stroke, and depression. The family observed that the patient had been sleeping for approximately 10 h. He was brought to the hospital and pronounced dead. Post...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of Medical Investigation 2024, Vol.71(3.4), pp.340-342
Hauptverfasser: Umemoto, Hitomi, Nushida, Hideyuki, Ito, Asuka, Kurata, Hiromitsu, Tokunaga, Itsuo, Iseki, Hirofumi, Nishimura, Akiyoshi
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container_end_page 342
container_issue 3.4
container_start_page 340
container_title The Journal of Medical Investigation
container_volume 71
creator Umemoto, Hitomi
Nushida, Hideyuki
Ito, Asuka
Kurata, Hiromitsu
Tokunaga, Itsuo
Iseki, Hirofumi
Nishimura, Akiyoshi
description A 70-year-old man presented with cardiopulmonary arrest. Previous medical history included orally medicated diabetes mellitus, hypertension, stroke, and depression. The family observed that the patient had been sleeping for approximately 10 h. He was brought to the hospital and pronounced dead. Postmortem blood examinations revealed a blood insulin level of 0.54 μU/mL, C-peptide level of 0.14 ng/mL, and blood glucose of 9 mg/dL. Autopsy revealed an injection scar with intradermal hemorrhage and a subcutaneous hemorrhage in the left abdomen measuring 0.2 cm in diameter. Histopathological analysis revealed hemorrhage and inflammatory cell infiltration in the scar. Furthermore, subcutaneous adipose tissue, perivascular area, and neurons stained positive for anti-insulin antibody. HE staining of the brain revealed mild edema, and anti-GFAP antibody revealed clasmatodendrosis with bead-like staining of astrocyte subdivisions in the cerebral gray matter. Postmortem blood glucose evaluation is difficult because blood glucose levels are not stable and blood insulin is degraded relatively quickly. However, the cause of death was determined to be hypoglycemic encephalopathy due to insulin overdose because insulin was detected in the skin at the injection site. Furthermore, immunohistochemical examination of the brain revealed findings that were consistent with hypoglycemic encephalopathy. Therefore, histological examination was useful for postmortem diagnosis. J. Med. Invest. 71 : 340-342, August, 2024
doi_str_mv 10.2152/jmi.71.340
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Previous medical history included orally medicated diabetes mellitus, hypertension, stroke, and depression. The family observed that the patient had been sleeping for approximately 10 h. He was brought to the hospital and pronounced dead. Postmortem blood examinations revealed a blood insulin level of 0.54 μU/mL, C-peptide level of 0.14 ng/mL, and blood glucose of 9 mg/dL. Autopsy revealed an injection scar with intradermal hemorrhage and a subcutaneous hemorrhage in the left abdomen measuring 0.2 cm in diameter. Histopathological analysis revealed hemorrhage and inflammatory cell infiltration in the scar. Furthermore, subcutaneous adipose tissue, perivascular area, and neurons stained positive for anti-insulin antibody. HE staining of the brain revealed mild edema, and anti-GFAP antibody revealed clasmatodendrosis with bead-like staining of astrocyte subdivisions in the cerebral gray matter. Postmortem blood glucose evaluation is difficult because blood glucose levels are not stable and blood insulin is degraded relatively quickly. However, the cause of death was determined to be hypoglycemic encephalopathy due to insulin overdose because insulin was detected in the skin at the injection site. Furthermore, immunohistochemical examination of the brain revealed findings that were consistent with hypoglycemic encephalopathy. Therefore, histological examination was useful for postmortem diagnosis. J. Med. 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Med. Invest.</addtitle><description>A 70-year-old man presented with cardiopulmonary arrest. Previous medical history included orally medicated diabetes mellitus, hypertension, stroke, and depression. The family observed that the patient had been sleeping for approximately 10 h. He was brought to the hospital and pronounced dead. Postmortem blood examinations revealed a blood insulin level of 0.54 μU/mL, C-peptide level of 0.14 ng/mL, and blood glucose of 9 mg/dL. Autopsy revealed an injection scar with intradermal hemorrhage and a subcutaneous hemorrhage in the left abdomen measuring 0.2 cm in diameter. Histopathological analysis revealed hemorrhage and inflammatory cell infiltration in the scar. Furthermore, subcutaneous adipose tissue, perivascular area, and neurons stained positive for anti-insulin antibody. HE staining of the brain revealed mild edema, and anti-GFAP antibody revealed clasmatodendrosis with bead-like staining of astrocyte subdivisions in the cerebral gray matter. Postmortem blood glucose evaluation is difficult because blood glucose levels are not stable and blood insulin is degraded relatively quickly. However, the cause of death was determined to be hypoglycemic encephalopathy due to insulin overdose because insulin was detected in the skin at the injection site. Furthermore, immunohistochemical examination of the brain revealed findings that were consistent with hypoglycemic encephalopathy. Therefore, histological examination was useful for postmortem diagnosis. J. Med. 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Furthermore, subcutaneous adipose tissue, perivascular area, and neurons stained positive for anti-insulin antibody. HE staining of the brain revealed mild edema, and anti-GFAP antibody revealed clasmatodendrosis with bead-like staining of astrocyte subdivisions in the cerebral gray matter. Postmortem blood glucose evaluation is difficult because blood glucose levels are not stable and blood insulin is degraded relatively quickly. However, the cause of death was determined to be hypoglycemic encephalopathy due to insulin overdose because insulin was detected in the skin at the injection site. Furthermore, immunohistochemical examination of the brain revealed findings that were consistent with hypoglycemic encephalopathy. Therefore, histological examination was useful for postmortem diagnosis. J. Med. 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subjects Aged
Brain Diseases - chemically induced
Brain Diseases - diagnosis
Brain Diseases - pathology
clasmatodendrosis
Drug Overdose
GFAP
Humans
Hypoglycemia - chemically induced
hypoglycemic encephalopathy
immunohistopathology
Insulin
Male
title A histopathologically diagnosed case of hypoglycemic encephalopathy due to insulin overdose
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