Lactation ketoacidosis is a rare yet severe metabolic emergency that has been reported in breastfeeding mothers. Reduced carbohydrate intake during breastfeeding has been reported as a common trigger for ketoacidosis. We report the case of a 31-year-old mother without diabetes who presented with life-threatening lactation ketoacidosis after following a ketogenic diet while exclusively breastfeeding her newborn baby. She was managed in the intensive care unit with dextrose and insulin infusion to reverse ketoacidosis. With prompt treatment, the patient's ketoacidosis resolved within 24 hours, and she was discharged well 3 days later. We further discuss the underlying increased metabolic demand in lactating women that puts them at risk of ketoacidosis, underlining the importance of early recognition of lactation ketoacidosis and nutritional education for lactating women.
A collision tumor involving metastasis to a pituitary adenoma is rare. We describe a case of a 68-year-old Bidayuh woman with underlying treatment-responsive lung adenocarcinoma, who presented with mass effect, panhypopituitarism and polyuria. Her initial imaging study reported pituitary macroadenoma, and she was treated with hormone replacement therapy. She then underwent transsphenoidal tumor debulking surgery with subsequent histopathological findings of a collision tumor of an adenocarcinoma with metastasis to a non-functioning pituitary adenoma.