Clinical Case Reports (Jun 2024)

Combined sepsis‐ and renal dysfunction‐induced hypoglycaemia in an older patient taking cibenzoline

  • Tatsuki Iha,
  • Ayako Watanabe,
  • Misa Saeki,
  • Ayaka Itoh,
  • Yuka Kashiwabara,
  • Akiko Fujiwara,
  • Kenji Momo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ccr3.8816
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Key Clinical Message An 86‐year‐old geriatric patient with sepsis presented cibenzoline‐induced hypoglycaemia, although within the boundary range of cibenzoline blood concentration. Abstract An 86‐year‐old geriatric patient taking cibenzoline for ametropic hypertrophic cardiac tendinopathy was admitted to our hospital for the treatment of sepsis. Upon admission, blood cibenzoline levels of 400.1 ng/mL were observed. Antibiotic therapy was initiated and cibenzoline was discontinued. On Day 16, cibenzoline was administered orally at a reduced dose of 50 mg/day. Several days after restarting cibenzoline, the patient developed hypoglycaemia (64 mg/dL), prompting the administration of 20% glucose. The present case demonstrates a rational timeline for cibenzoline administration, considering the patient's renal dysfunction and sepsis. Clinicians should exercise caution when managing older patients with severe infections who are receiving cibenzoline, and should consider the possibility of blood glucose fluctuations regardless of cibenzoline blood levels. Further research is warranted to better understand and address the potential side effects of cibenzoline administration in geriatric populations.

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