24.3 Hyperparathyroidism Flashcards

1
Q

a) List the causes of primary hyperparathyroidism. (10%)

A

> > Parathyroid adenoma.

> > Gland hyperplasia.

> > Parathyroid cancer.

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2
Q

b) Which biochemical abnormalities are seen in primary hyperparathyroidism? (15%)

A

> > Elevated parathyroid hormone.

> > Elevated calcium.

> > Reduced phosphate.

> > Elevated alkaline phosphatase.

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3
Q

c) What are the systemic effects of hyperparathyroidism? (20%)

A
  1. Renal:
    stones,
    impaired concentrating ability,
    polyuria,
    renal failure.
  2. Skeletal:
    bone resorption,
    pain,
    fractures,
    osteitis fibrosis cystica.
  3. Gastrointestinal:
    calcium-induced gastric hypersecretion,
    peptic ulceration,
    acute and chronic pancreatitis,
    nonspecific abdominal pain.
  4. Central nervous system:
    nonspecific symptoms,
    weakness,
    deterioration in memory and cerebration.
  5. Cardiovascular:
    conduction defects, hypertension.
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4
Q

d) What important factors must the anaesthetist consider before, during and after anaesthesia for
parathyroidectomy? (55%)

A

Preoperative:
» Consider underlying cause
and associated issues:
coexistent endocrine disease,
chronic kidney disease,
recent transplant.

> > Consider the impact of hyperparathyroidism:
calcium level
(may need correction preoperatively,
pamidronate and fluids),

renal function,
cardiac rhythm (check ECG).

Intraoperative:

> > Anaesthesia: surgical field near airway.
Reinforced tube or LMA.

Can be performed with
regional anaesthetic technique;
bilateral superficial cervical plexus
blocks with supplementation.

> > Position:
supine, head-up tilt,
sandbag under shoulders,
head ring.
Care with positioning;
risk of osteoporosis and
pathological fractures.

> > Warming: potentially long surgery
especially if checking with frozen
sections for completeness of
adenoma resection or on-table parathyroid
hormone assays.

> > Methylene Blue to identify glands:
risk of anaphylaxis,
interference with
oxygen saturations monitoring.

> > Recurrent laryngeal nerve monitoring:
short-acting muscle relaxant for intubation.
Consider remifentanil infusion thereafter.`

Postoperative:
» Hypocalcaemia:
check at 6 hours and 24 hours.
May need oral or intravenous supplementation.

> > Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy:
voice change, difficulty breathing.

> > Incomplete resection.

> > Analgesia:
requirements low with local
anaesthetic use. NSAIDs may be
contraindicated due to comorbidities.

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5
Q

Parathyroid gland anatomy

A

There are four parathyroid glands,
located at the poles of the thyroid gland.

However, there is great variation in their location.

They are small, 3 × 6 × 2 mm.

Blood supply is from the inferior thyroid artery.

Their secretion is inhibited by
high parathyroid hormone and
calcium levels and stimulated by
high phosphate levels

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6
Q

Secondary hyper PTH

A

Secondary hyperparathyroidism occurs in
chronic kidney disease:

the failing kidney does not excrete
phosphate efficiently and
does not hydroxylate vitamin D,

reducing calcium absorption
from the gastrointestinal tract.

After a prolonged period of
secondary hyperparathyroidism,

tertiary hyperparathyroidism may develop.

Here, even once calcium and phosphate
levels return to normal (for example after a renal transplant), the parathyroid
glands continue to oversecrete.

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