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Gastric bypass surgery contributing to hyperammonaemic encephalopathy: an under-reported cause of severe nutritional deficiency and significant patient mortality
Author(s) -
William Dace,
Ankur Srivastava,
Danielle Milne,
Adam Howden,
H Kemp,
N Cantley
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
acute medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1747-4892
pISSN - 1747-4884
DOI - 10.52964/amja.0890
Subject(s) - medicine , encephalopathy , parenteral nutrition , multidisciplinary team , intensive care medicine , enteral administration , pediatrics , gastric bypass , weight loss , obesity , nursing
Gastric-bypass associated hyperammonaemia (GaBHA) is an under-recognised cause of non-hepatic encephalopathy that is associated with significant mortality and has limited reporting in published literature. GaBHA has been reported predominately in middle-aged females with a past surgical history of Roux-En-Y surgical procedure. Individuals may present at any stage post-surgery and an important minority may have an undiagnosed inherited metabolic disorder. We report a case of a 49 year old woman who presented acutely with encephalopathy, a significantly elevated plasma ammonia level, and substantial multifactorial nutritional deficiency which required correction with intensive enteral and parenteral nutritional support. This case represented a diagnostic and management challenge for acute medical physicians and the multidisciplinary team involved.

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