Objective: To report four cases of pyroglutamic acidemia in adults causing clinically significant acidosis.
Data sources: Patients admitted to the intensive care units of the Alfred Hospital (a quaternary referral center) and Geelong Hospital (a major regional center) with an unexplained high anion gap acidosis.
Conclusions: Pyroglutamic acidemia (5-oxoprolinemia) is a rare cause of high anion gap metabolic acidosis that should be suspected in patients presenting with sepsis, hepatic, and/or renal dysfunction who are receiving drugs such as acetaminophen, flucloxacillin, and vigabatrin after the more common causes of a high anion gap acidosis have been excluded. Should pyroglutamic aciduria be present, known precipitants should be ceased, infection should be managed aggressively, and supportive management should be instituted.