# Diabetic Ketoacidosis With Schmidt Syndrome: An Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome Type 2

**Authors:** Munhill Shahzad, Faheem Zaman

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.81588 · 2025-04-01

## TL;DR

This paper presents a rare case of a 28-year-old man with Schmidt syndrome, an autoimmune disorder affecting multiple glands, who developed diabetic ketoacidosis.

## Contribution

The paper highlights a rare clinical case of Schmidt syndrome with diabetic ketoacidosis as a presenting feature.

## Key findings

- The patient had Addison’s disease and later developed diabetes and thyroid dysfunction, consistent with Schmidt syndrome.
- Diabetic ketoacidosis occurred two months after diabetes diagnosis, indicating rapid disease progression.
- Treatment with corticosteroids, thyroxine, and insulin led to clinical improvement.

## Abstract

Schmidt syndrome or autoimmune polyglandular syndrome type 2 is an autoimmune disorder that affects many hormone-producing (endocrine) glands. With the role of genetics and familial predisposition, autoimmune thyroid disease in combination with Addison's disease is the most common presentation. Diabetes mellitus, hyperparathyroidism, pernicious anemia, hypogonadism, vitiligo, chronic atrophic gastritis, chronic autoimmune hepatitis, alopecia, myasthenia gravis, rheumatoid arthritis, Sjögren's syndrome, and thrombocytic purpura may or may not be present.

We present a case of a 28-year-old male, already diagnosed with Addison’s disease for the past eight years. He presented to our medical department with nausea and vomiting over two days. On presentation, he was lethargic and dehydrated with sunken eyes as well as discoloration of the gums and skin. His abdomen was soft but mildly tender. He had high serum glucose levels and was diagnosed as a case of diabetic ketoacidosis based on urinary ketones and arterial blood gases, after being diagnosed with diabetes two months prior. On further investigation, his thyroid function test was deranged two months ago as well. This syndrome is a rare autoimmune disorder that is difficult to diagnose because its symptoms depend on which gland becomes involved first. The patient was treated and improved with corticosteroids, thyroxine, and insulin therapy.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Diabetic Ketoacidosis (MONDO:0012819), Schmidt Syndrome (MONDO:0010012), Addison’s disease (MONDO:0100480), diabetes mellitus (MONDO:0005015), thyroid disease (MONDO:0003240), pernicious anemia (MONDO:0008228), hypogonadism (MONDO:0002146), vitiligo (MONDO:0008661), chronic atrophic gastritis (MONDO:0006665), chronic autoimmune hepatitis (MONDO:0016264), alopecia (MONDO:0004907), myasthenia gravis (MONDO:0009688), rheumatoid arthritis (MONDO:0008383)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** pernicious anemia (MESH:D000752), thrombocytic purpura (MESH:D011693), Sjogren's syndrome (MESH:D012859), nausea (MESH:D009325), autoimmune disorder (MESH:D001327), Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome Type 2 (MESH:D016884), autoimmune thyroid disease (MESH:D013967), lethargic (MESH:D004674), Diabetic Ketoacidosis (MESH:D016883), hypogonadism (MESH:D007006), alopecia (MESH:D000505), discoloration (MESH:D014075), hyperparathyroidism (MESH:D006961), Addison's disease (MESH:D000224), chronic atrophic gastritis (MESH:D005757), vitiligo (MESH:D014820), Diabetes mellitus (MESH:D003920), myasthenia gravis (MESH:D009157), dehydrated (MESH:D003681), rheumatoid arthritis (MESH:D001172), chronic autoimmune hepatitis (MESH:D019693), vomiting (MESH:D014839)
- **Chemicals:** ketones (MESH:D007659), thyroxine (MESH:D013974), glucose (MESH:D005947), insulin (MESH:D007328)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12046195/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12046195