A case of conscious disturbance secondary to urinary tract infection

  • Adachi Hiroshi
    Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Saiseikai Fukuoka General Hospital
  • Kishikawa Masanobu
    Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Saiseikai Fukuoka General Hospital
  • Norio Hirofumi
    Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Saiseikai Fukuoka General Hospital
  • Oya Seiro
    Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Saiseikai Fukuoka General Hospital
  • Hayashida Kazuyuki
    Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Saiseikai Fukuoka General Hospital

Bibliographic Information

Other Title
  • 尿路感染症により意識障害を呈した一症例

Search this article

Description

A 69-year-old man was admitted to our intensive care unit because of a disturbance in consciousness. He had been diagnosed as having type II diabetes at the age of 24 years but had not developed severe liver dysfunction. A plain abdominal CT showed left pyelonephritis and an expanded left renal pelvis as a result of ureteral stones. A laboratory investigation revealed hyperammonemia. A cranial MRI showed edematous changes in bilateral thalamus and bilateral insula, supporting a diagnosis of hyperammonemia. After the placement of a left ureteral stent, the patient's consciousness level reversed and his plasma ammonia level returned to normal. Proteus mirabilis, a urea-metabolizing bacteria, was cultured in blood and urine samples from the patient. The production of urease by bacteria in the urinary tract probably hydrolyzed the urinary urea, producing ammonia. We suspect that the source of the disturbed consciousness in the present patient might have been hyperammonemic encephalopathy caused by the absorption of ammonia produced by bacteria in the retained urine into the systemic circulation.

Journal

References(6)*help

See more

Details 詳細情報について

Report a problem

Back to top