Article Text
Summary
This paper details the case of a 26-year-old woman with depletion syndrome and the effectiveness of her treatment with indomethacin. Villous adenomas are benign neoplasms with a high incidence of becoming malignant. A small percentage of villous adenomas are known to cause depletion syndrome, also referred to as the McKittrick-Wheelock syndrome, a condition characterised by secretory diarrhoea, dehydration, hyponatremia, hypokalaemia, hypochloraemia, metabolic acidosis and acute renal failure. Prostaglandin-E2 mediates the hypersecretion mechanism observed in depletion syndrome, and can be inhibited by cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors. This case study measured the effectiveness of prostaglandin inhibition on a patient with oral and parenteral electrolyte replacement refractory depletion syndrome. Fluid loss and prostaglandin levels were measured before and after pharmacological treatment. This case demonstrates a 49% decrease in rectal effluent and a marked commensurate decrease in daily replenishment requirements within 48 hours of indomethacin treatment initiation, resulting in subsequent electrolyte stabilisation.
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Footnotes
Contributors MDK was the primary author and primary editor. KS significantly contributed to most sections and edited the entire document. GS primarily contributed to the references and background sections. All authors cared for the patient on the primary internal medicine team.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent Obtained.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.