Diabetes PubMed

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home Medication Sulfonylureas Acetohexamide Peritoneal dialysis in the treatment of acetohexamide-induced hypoglycemia

Peritoneal dialysis in the treatment of acetohexamide-induced hypoglycemia

Am J Hosp Pharm. 1977 Jan;34(1):68-70.

Skoutakis VA, Black WD, Acchiardo SR, Wood GC.

Severe hypoglycemia in a 67-year-old black male as a result of the ingestion of acetohexamide is described. Because of both his renal status as well as the severity of the hypoglycemia, the patient received peritoneal dialysis. Sequential specimens of serum, urine and dialysate were collected to measure the levels of acetohexamide and its main active metabolite, hydroxyhexamide. The data indicate that these compounds are not dialyzable. In patients with reduced renal function, peritoneal dialysis may be one way to administer large amounts of glucose with very little administration of fluid in the treatment of acetohexamide-induced hypoglycemia. For those azotemic patients whose hypoglycemia is difficult to manage, intensive dialysis might be a means to correct the abnormality of glucose metabolism imposed by uremia.

PMID: 831475

 

Bookmark and Share

Popular Diabetes PubMed Citations

Newsflash

Millions unite for diabetes awareness on World Diabetes Day 2010
Starting today, people from all corners of the world are uniting together for three days of celebration to put diabetes firmly in the public spotlight. World Diabetes Day is the best opportunity there is to draw attention to the silent killer that is diabetes.
 
Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation Launches $100 Million Initiative
The Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation announced Together on Diabetes®: Communities Uniting to Meet America's Diabetes Challenge, a 5-year, $100 million initiative to help patients living with type 2 diabetes better manage their disease beyond the doors of their doctor's office - in their homes and communities - and for the course of their disease.
 
New global survey reveals more than one in three patients fail to take insulin as prescribed
More than one in three diabetes patients skip doses or fail to take their insulin as prescribed, stating that they have done so on average three times in the last month, and 77% of physicians estimate that in reality this number could be as high as six doses*, according to the Global Attitudes of Patients and Physicians in Insulin Therapy (GAPPTM) survey, released today by Novo Nordisk.
 

Facebook Page Twitter Subscribe to Latest Diabetes PubMed facts... by Email RSS

Subscribe

Get Diabetes PubMed facts delivered by email. Enter your email address:


Delivered by FeedBurner

Who's Online

We have 10 guests online

Sponsored Links

PharmaNews.eu
PharmaNews.eu - the dynamic European pharmaceutical news engine.
www.pharmanews.eu

Advertise here