Calcium Abnormalities Flashcards

1
Q

What is hypocalcaemia defined as?

A
  • Serum corrected calcium concentration < 2.2 mmol/L
  • Normal target = 2.2-2.6 mmol/L
  • Mild → corrected Ca > 1.9 mmol/L
  • Severe → correct Ca < 1.9 mmol/L
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2
Q

Where is calcium found in our bodies?

A
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3
Q

What are the causes of hypocalcaemia?

A
  • With ↑PTHVit D def / CKD / Pseudohypoparathyroid / Rhabdo / Tumour lysis / Acute pancreatitis / Blood transfusion
  • With ↓PTH → Neck surgery / Hypoparathyroid / DiGeorge Syndrome / Radiation
  • Hypomagnesaemia (due to end-organ PTH resistance)
  • DrugsBisphosphonates / Calcium chelators / Denosumab / Cinacalet
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4
Q

What are clinical features of hypocalcaemia?

A
  • Paraesthesia (peri-orally + fingers/toes)
  • Muscle cramps
  • Wheezing
  • Laryngospasm
  • CNS → seizures / irritability / confusion
  • Chest pain
  • Palpitations (arrhythmias)
  • Trousseau’s and Chvostek’s sign
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5
Q

It is important to distinguish whether the cause of hypocalcaemia is acute or chronic. Acute severe hypocalcaemia (< 1.9 mmol) is a medical emergency that requires urgent treatment and cardiac monitoring.

Which investigations help to determine underlying cause?

A
  • Serum corrected calcium → < 2.2
  • Bone profile
  • U+Es
  • Vit D
  • PTH
  • Mg
  • ECG → prolonged QT

Other ix guided by presentation - eg lipase for suspected pancreatitis

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6
Q

What is the management of mild hypocalcaemia (1.9-2.2 mmol/L)?

A
  • Oral calcium supplements → Sandocal 2 tabs BD / Adcal D3 1-3 tabs BD
  • Vit D replacement → weekly 6-8wks then daily
  • Magnesium replacement (if ↓Mg)
    • IV Mg sulphate 2-5g in 100-250mls NaCl 0.9% / 1-4 hours
    • Oral Mg glycerophosphate 2 tablets TDS or Mg aspartate 6.5g sachet BD
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7
Q

What is the management of severe hypocalcaemia (< 1.9 mmol/L or symptomatic at any level)?

A
  • 10ml 10% IV calcium gluconate in 100mls of 0.9% sodium chloride or 5% dextrose over 10-20 mins - can be given neat over 3 mins if required
  • Cardiac monitoring
  • Consider repeat dose (until asymptomatic)
  • Follow-up infusion → 100ml 10% calcium gluconate in 1L 0.9% NaCl or 5% dextrose given at rate of 50-100 ml/hr
  • Calcium monitoring → check after 1-2 hrs of initial dose then monitor 4-6hrly
  • Treat co-existent pathology (replace vit D or magnesium)
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8
Q

What is hypercalcaemia defined as?

A
  • Serum corrected calcium conc >2.6 mmol/L
  • Mild → 2.6.3 mmol/L
  • Moderate → 3.0-3.5 mmol/L
  • Severe>3.5 mmol/L
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9
Q

What are the causes of hypercalcaemia?

A
  • Malignancy → commonly due to release of PTHrP (mimics action of PTH); other mechanism is osteolytic damage to bone or activation of Vit D
  • Hyperparathyroidism → elevated PTH 2o to adenoma/hyperplasia
  • XS Vitamin D → XS ingestion of Vit D or granulomatous disease inc Vit D activation
  • Others → lithium / thiazides / adrenal insufficiency / familial
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10
Q

What are the clinical features of hypercalcaemia?

A

“Bones, stones, abdo groans and psychic moans”

  • Polyuria / polydipsia (mild) → Oliguria / Anuria (severe)
  • Confusion / Coma
  • Weakness / Fatigue / Dehydration (moderate)
  • N+V / Abdo pain / Pancreatitis (severe)
  • Cardiac dysrythmias (shortens QT)
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11
Q

The diagnosis of hypercalcaemia is based on a serum corrected calcium > 2.6 mmol/L.

How can you confirm the hypercalcaemia?

A

Bone profile - level and duration

  • Long-standing, asymptomatic mild hypercalcaemia may be seen in FHH
  • Sudden, symptomatic, mod-severe hypercalcaemia suggestive of malignancy
  • 1o hyperparathyroidism usually seen w/ mild, chronic elevations in calcium
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12
Q

What do PTH levels tell you about hypercalcaemia causes?

A
  • Elevated PTH → primary or tertiary hyperparathyroidism
  • Mid-upper normal PTH → inappropriately high + suggestive of hyperparathyroidism
  • Low / normal → malignancy or hypervitaminosis D
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13
Q

What common investigations should be done for hypercalcaemia?

A
  • FBC / U+Es / LFT / CRP / ESR
  • TFTs
  • Vit D
  • ACE (sarcoid)
  • Malignancy screen + tumour markers
  • Urine calcium levels (FHH)
  • Imaging → CXR / CT CAP
  • Parathyroid scans / Neck USS/MRI
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14
Q

What is the treatment for mild (< 3 mmol/L) and asymptomatic/mild symptom hypercalcaemia?

A
  • No specific treatment
  • Increase oral fluids (6-8 glasses of water)
  • Avoid precipitants eg. thiazide diuretics, lithium, dehydration
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15
Q

What is the treatment for moderate (3-3.5 mmol/L) hypercalcaemia?

A
  • Acute rise requires inpt admission for IV fluids
  • Chronically raised may not require acute management
  • Depends on aetiology and symptomatology
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16
Q

What is the management for severe (>3.5 mmol/L) hypercalcaemia?

A
  • Urgent admission to hospital
  • Agressive IV fluids 200-300 ml / hr (4-6hrly bags)
  • Then reduced to maintain UO at 100-150ml/hr (usually 8 hour bag enough)
  • Can add loop diuretic to fluids
  • Consider bisphosphonates (CI: renal impairment)

Corticosteroids for Vit D XS / Surgery for hyperparathyroid / Cinacalet / Dialysis