Abstract
A 72-year-old woman with end-stage kidney disease due to recurrent urinary tract infections and obstructive uropathy of a solitary kidney presented to our hospital for renal transplantation. She underwent successful transplantation of a deceased donor allograft, but developed acute mental status deterioration on the fifth postoperative day. Her serum ammonia was found to be markedly elevated to 447 μmol/L in the setting of normal hepatic function. She was treated with emergent dialysis and empiric antibiotics targeting urea-splitting organisms, and ultimately made a full neurologic recovery with stable renal allograft function. Noncirrhotic hyperammonemia (NCH) is an exceedingly rare clinical entity but seems to have a predilection for patients who have undergone solid organ transplantation. This report emphasizes the importance of rapid diagnosis and initiation of treatment for NCH, which is associated with a high rate of mortality and irreversible neurological morbidity. We outline the successful workup and management approach for this patient.
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Li, G. Z., Tio, M. C., Pak, L. M., Krier, J., Seifter, J. L., Tullius, S. G., … Stergachis, A. B. (2019). Noncirrhotic hyperammonemia after deceased donor kidney transplantation: A case report. American Journal of Transplantation, 19(11), 3197–3201. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajt.15545
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