We report the case of an obese 58 years old patient evaluated for hypoglycemia. The response to a prolonged fasting test was normal, but symptomatic hypoglycemia ensued after mixed meals and with oral glucose loading. A magnetic resonance scan of the abdomen revealed a pancreatic tail tumor, histologically diagnosed as benign insulinoma after successful laparotomy. "Glucose-responsive" insulinomas, although rare, have been previously described in the literature. Therefore, the diagnosis of insulinoma should also be considered in patients that exhibit postprandial rather than fasting hypoglycemia. key words: insulinoma, hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia, postprandial hypoglycemia.
Case presentationA 58 years-old male patient was admitted to "N. C. Paulescu" Institute in March 2009 for medical evaluation of hypoglicemic episodes. Two weeks prior to admission the patient experienced an episode of lipothymialike symptoms (lightheadedness, palpitations, sweating) followed by transient loss of conscience. The symptoms appeared during postprandial state (2-3 hours after a meal), when the patient was supine, wich implies a moderate physical activity. The ambulance team found the patient partially recovered, conscious, complaining of dizziness, and tested the glycemia upon arrival, with a glucometer, revealing a value of 47 mg/dl. With intravenous glucose administration the patient's state improved slowly over the next hour. Further history taking from the patient revealed similar rare episodes troughout the last year consisting of dizziness, sweating, and lipothymia (without loss of consciousness) which did not prompt the patient to seek medical attention.Clinical examination after admision was near-normal. It revealed: patient in no apparent distress, height 168 cm, weight 102 kg, BMI 36 kg/mp, abdominal circumference 115 cm, normal respiratory system, normal cardiovasculary system, BP=120/80 mmHg, HR=72 bpm, no palpable masses in the