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Combined metformin-associated lactic acidosis and euglycemic ketoacidosis.

Wien Klin Wochenschr · 2017

Last updated 2026-05-28

Three patients with kidney problems developed both lactic acidosis and ketoacidosis while taking metformin. Their blood pH levels were as low as 6.80, lactic acid levels reached up to 22 mmol/l, and ketoacid levels went as high as 16 mmol/l, but their blood sugar remained normal or low. Treatment with glucose and kidney support helped resolve the conditions.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalWien Klin Wochenschr, 2017
Citations14
Relative citation ratio0.65
NIH percentile36
Molecules

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In renal failure metformin can lead to lactic acidosis. Additional inhibition of hepatic gluconeogenesis by accumulation of the drug may aggravate fasting-induced ketoacidosis. We report the occurrence of metformin-associated lactic acidosis (MALA) with concurrent euglycemic ketoacidosis (MALKA) in three patients with renal failure. CASE PRESENTATIONS: Patient 1: a 78-year-old woman (pH = 6.89, lactic acid 22 mmol/l, serum ketoacids 7.4 mmol/l and blood glucose 63 mg/dl) on metformin and insulin treatment. Patient 2: a 79-year-old woman on metformin treatment (pH = 6.80, lactic acid 14.7 mmol/l, serum ketoacids 6.4 mmol/l and blood glucose 76 mg/dl). Patient 3: a 71-year-old man on metformin, canagliflozin and liraglutide treatment (pH = 7.21, lactic acid 5.9 mmol/l, serum ketoacids 16 mmol/l and blood glucose 150 mg/dl). In all patients, ketoacidosis receded on glucose infusion and renal replacement therapy. CONCLUSION: This case series highlights the parallel occurrence of MALA and euglycemic ketoacidosis, the latter exceeding ketosis due to starvation, suggesting a metformin-triggered inhibition of gluconeogenesis. Affected patients benefit from glucose infusion counteracting suppressed hepatic gluconeogenesis.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 28865058 ↗