Insulin autoimmune syndrome in a patient with methimazole and carbimazole-treated Graves' disease: a case report.

1994 
: Insulin autoimmune syndrome (IAS) includes fasting or reactive hypoglycemia, hyperinsulinemia and the presence of insulin-binding antibodies in patients who have never been exposed to exogenous insulin. The report concerns a 34-year-old male patient with Graves' disease who had history of having taken methimazole for two months, without any consequence, 4 years previously. However, when methimazole was again administered for three weeks followed by a week of carbimazole, the patient suffered hypoglycemia 4 times during the next 4 weeks. He denied history of diabetes mellitus (DM), of taking any oral hypoglycemic agent or of having received insulin injection. Laboratory data showed total serum insulin level > 320 microU/mL, free insulin 55 microU/mL and insulin antibody 88.3%. Oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) revealed DM pattern. Since the patient had history of allergy to anti-thyroid drugs before this event, so he was treated with radioiodine (131I). There was no episode of hypoglycemic attack during 15 months of follow-up.
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