
Autopsy report on pseudo-Bartter syndrome with renal calcification induced by diuretics and diet pills
Author(s) -
Kana Unuma,
Akihiro Tojo,
Kazuki Harada,
Kanju Saka,
Makoto Nakajima,
Takeshi Ishii,
Toshiro Fujita,
Kenichi Yoshida
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
bmj case reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.231
H-Index - 26
ISSN - 1757-790X
DOI - 10.1136/bcr.12.2008.1380
Subject(s) - medicine , furosemide , pill , bartter syndrome , metabolic alkalosis , autopsy , hypokalemia , vomiting , endocrinology , pharmacology
A woman in her mid-forties had repeated vomiting and diarrhoea accompanied by muscle weakness soon after she started taking seven different diet pills imported from Thailand. After she had taken the pills for 8 days, respiratory depression progressed rapidly to arrest. Blood tests at the Emergency Department showed severe hypokalaemia with metabolic alkalosis. We diagnosed that she had developed pseudo-Bartter syndrome from the findings based on ionic abnormalities and high renin and aldosterone levels, and hyperplasia of the juxtaglomerular apparatus. A postmortem blood analysis indicated subtherapeutic levels of furosemide. We concluded that the patient died from pseudo-Bartter syndrome, which was triggered by chronic self-administration of furosemide and aggravated by the diet pills. This is the first pseudo-Bartter syndrome autopsy report to show histological localisation of calcification in the kidneys.