Hypercalcaemia Flashcards
1
Q
Causes of hypercalcaemia
A
- Primary HyperPTH (from solitary adenoma; rarely multiple endocrine neoplasia)
- Malignancy
- Decreased Vit d
- Increased bone turnover (e.g. hyperthyroidism, thiazides, Vit A intoxication)
- Renal failure & secondary HyperPTH
- Familial hypocalciuric hypercalcaemia
- Other (e.g. lithium increases PTH)
2
Q
Non specific symptoms of high calcium
A
Tiredness weakness & episodes of confusion
Anorexia & constipation
Nausea & vomiting
Acute abdominal pain (from acute pancreatitis)
Polyuria & polydipsia
Hx of HTN or bradycardia
3
Q
Specific symptoms of high calcium
A
- Peptic ulcer or renal colic (stones, moans, bones & abdominal groans from primary HyperPTH)
- Neck mass
- Band keratopathy on eye examination
4
Q
Hypercalcaemia history
A
- Past history of malignant disease
- Drugs (thiazides, lithium, Vit D, calcium)
- CKD ( cause of secondary HyperPTH)
- Symptoms of thyrotoxicosis and hypercalcaemia
- Ask about recent immobilisation
- Family history of hypercalcaemia
- familial hypocalciuric hypercalcaemia
- Multiple endocrine neoplasia syndromes (ie MEN1 MEN2)
5
Q
Hypercalcaemia investigations
A
- Total serum calcium & correct for hypoalbuminaemia
- PTH
- In a young otherwise asymptomatic person with marginal elevation OT PTH, a 24 hour urine calcium examination to exclude Familial Hypocalciuric Hypercalcaemia (FHH
- IF low or undetectable PTH, consider
- malignancy: measure PTH-related protein, perform bone scan & protein electrophoretogram
- granulomatous disease (sarcoidosis, TB, berylliosis, lymphoma): look for increased Vit D - CXR for ?malignancy