| Literature DB >> 22348860 |
Siddharth A Wartak1, Reshma A Mehendale, Benjamin Freda, Ashish Verma, David N Rose.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: It is challenging to diagnose two coexisting medical conditions if the symptoms are overlapping. This is further confounded if the patient presents with an unexplained deterioration in mental status. A low anion gap or a zero anion gap is an uncommon clinical finding and has few differential diagnoses. This test therefore has important implications in correctly identifying underlying medical conditions. CASEEntities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22348860 PMCID: PMC3306268 DOI: 10.1186/1752-1947-6-72
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Laboratory results.
| Test | Value |
|---|---|
| Hemoglobin | 6.6 gm/dL |
| White cells | 9.9 k/mm3 |
| Platelets | 235 k/mm3 |
| Sodium | 131 mmol/L |
| Potassium | 4.7 mmol/L |
| Chloride | 112 mmol/L |
| Bicarbonate | 19 mmol/L |
| Glucose | 107 mg/dL |
| Anion gap | 0 |
| Blood | 21 mg/dL |
| Creatinine | 1.5 mg/dL (Baseline 1.1 mg/dL) |
| Corrected calcium | 9.5 mg/dL |
| Phosphorous | 4.2 mg/dL |
| Magnesium | 1.1 mEq/L |
| Ammonia | 81 μmole/L |
| Total protein | 12 gm/dL |
| Albumin | 2 gm/dL |
| Alanine transaminase | 42 units/L |
| Aspartate transaminase | 43 units/L |
| Total bilirubin | 0.8 mg/dL |
| International normalized ratio | 1.2 |
Figure 1Bone marrow biopsy showing plasma cells.