Advertisement

Nesidioblastosis Associated with Insulin-mediated Hypoglycemia in an Adult

  1. David M Nathan,
  2. Lloyd Axelrod,
  3. Karl H Proppe,
  4. Robert Wald,
  5. Harry J Hirsch and
  6. Donald B Martin
  1. Diabetes Unit and the Medical Services, and the Department of Pathology, Massachusetts General Hospital; the Diabetes Unit and the Department of Pediatrics, The Children's Hospital Medical Center; and the Departments of Medicine, Pathology, and Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School Boston, Massachusetts
  1. Address reprint requests to David M. Nathan, Diabetes Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114.

Abstract

Nesidioblastosis, the process of differentiation of pancreatic islets from ductular epithelium, is a well-described cause of insulin-mediated hypoglycemia in neonates and infants, but not in adults. A 58-yr-old woman with characteristic clinical features of fasting hypoglycemia had inappropriately elevated plasma immunoreactive insulin levels during symptomatic episodes of fasting hypoglycemia. Angiography, palpation at laparotomy, and resection of the distal three-quarters of the pancreas provided no evidence of a tumor. Pathologic examination of the resected pancreas revealed the findings of nesidioblastosis, i.e., budding of islets from the wall of ductules, and also increased number and size of islets and abnormal shape and location of islets. An entire spectrum of islet cell abnormalities including nesidioblastosis can cause insulin-mediated hypoglycemia in adults, as it does in neonates and infants.

| Table of Contents
Advertisement