“…As noted above, in many conditions, hyperammonaemia is precipitated in patients with these metabolic disorders by intercurrent infections, both with and without urea‐splitting organisms (11, 60, 116, 119), fever (11), total parenteral nutrition (58, 59), gastrointestinal bleeding (increased load of absorbed protein from the gut) (53, 54), steroid use (52) (increased muscle catabolism), trauma (55), exposure to insect repellent (115) and intake of valproic acid (88–91) or alcohol (119). Pregnancy, especially the puerperium, is also a risk factor for NCHE in susceptible patients (114), probably owing to the metabolic stress that occurs during that period, but also possibly as a consequence of the delivery of an infant who does not bear an OTC‐deficient gene and can provide ureagenetic activity prenatally for the mother.…”