OnlineMedEd: Nephrology - "Calcium" Flashcards
Explain the calcium sensor on PTH cells.
It is an inhibitory sensor, so when Ca is high it turns off the release of PTH.
Osteo-__________ stimulate osteo-_________.
blasts; clasts
Explain how PTH affects the bones and gut.
Causes increased release of Ca and Phos in the bones and increased Ca and Phos absorption in the gut.
For every __________ change in albumin, increse the total calcium by 0.8.
1
You need to replete Ca to avoid what dire complications?
Seizure
Arrhythmia
Only treat hypercalcemia if _____________.
the person is symptomatic (bones, stones, moans, groans)
If they don’t, then recheck.
How do you treat hypercalcemia?
- Fluids (helps dilute the calcium and flush the calcium from the kidneys)
- Bisphosphonates
- Calcitonin (immediate action for acute symptoms)
•Loop diuretics (only when they’re volume up)
How do patients with hypercalcemia present?
- Bone pain
- GI pain
- AMS
- Kidney stones
- Pathologic fractures
- Brown tumors (osteitis fibrosis cystica)
What three labs are diagnostic of hyperparathyroidism?
- High PTH
- High Ca
- Low Phos
Differentiate primary, secondary, and tertiary hyperparathyroidism.
- Primary: single adenoma that secretes autonomously
- Secondary: appropriate physiologic response to low Ca or high Phos
- Tertiary: multiple autonomous adenomas
Other than PTH, what lab can clue you into a diagnosis of hypercalcemia of malignancy?
High Phos
In HOM, the lesions release Ca and Phos from bone. The PTH is thus low and Phos continues to rise.
What pattern of Ca, Phos, and PTH do you see in granulomatous hypercalcemia?
- High Ca
- High Phos
- Low PTH
In a patient who has been _____________, the calcium can be elevated.
immobilized
Give a differential for hypocalcemia.
- Hypoparathyroidism (iatrogenic 2/2 thyroidectomy or parathyroidectomy)
- Vitamin D deficiency
- CKD (secondary hyperparathyroidism)
- Pancreatitis (sequestration of Ca)
Albright hereditary osteodystrophy is also called _________________.
pseudohypoparathyroidism
Defective PTH receptor leading to increased PTH but low Ca.