Hyperammonemia in distal renal tubular acidosis: is it more common than we think?
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Abstrakt
The hyperammonemia in distal renal tubular acidosis, previously only described in two cases, is considered an unusual occurrence. After the report published in 2005, we observed plasma ammonia levels above normal range during metabolic decompensation in two other consecutive pediatric patients suffering from distal renal tubular acidosis. The ammonia plasma levels returned to normal range after treatment with sodium bicarbonate and potassium salt. In distal renal tubular acidosis, hyperammonemia is probably the result of an imbalance between the increased ammonia synthesis, in response to metabolic acidosis, and the impaired ammonia excretion, typical of distal renal tubular acidosis. According to this physiopathological mechanism, our observation shows that hyperammonemia is not an uncommon finding in distal renal tubular acidosis, and should be included among differential diagnosis of hyperammonemia in infants and children.