Hypercalcemia Flashcards
What are the adverse effects associated with hypercalcemia?
● Renal damage ● cardiac arrhythmias ● soft tissue calcification ● CNS abnormalities ● Nausea / vomiting = warning sign
What are the treatments for hypercalcemia?
Saline Diuresis
● Rehydration
● Furosemide diuresis (not thiazide)
● Hypercalcemia can be life threatening . Rehydration with IV isotonic saline since patients are frequently severely dehydrated b/c hypercalcemia compromises renal concentrating mechanisms. Agents that augment Ca2 + excretion such as loop ( not thiazide) diuretics may help to counteract the effect of plasma volume expansion by saline, but are contradicted until volume is repleted b/c otherwise they will aggravate volume depletion.
Calcitonin - See above
Mithramycin - See above
- A cytotoxic antibiotic that reduces bone resorption by impairing osteoclast function; binds to DNA and inhibits formation of mRNA: protein synthesis may be required for bone resorption by osteoclasts
- Used to treat hypercalcemia and Paget’s disease at 1/10 the dose used to treat cancer
- Mitramycin also has chelating activity
Phosphate - Bind Ca and form complex (b/c only free Ca can do damage)
- Kind of a last ditch effort
- Danger is the development of sudden hypocalcemia
Glucocorticoids - No real role, unless hypercalcemia results from sarcoidosis, lymphoma, or hypervitaminosis D
Bisphosphonates - IV bisphosphonates have proven to be very effective in the management of hypercalcemia