Hyper/Hypocalcemia Flashcards

1
Q

which form of serum calcium is active?

A

ionized calcium - biologically active, ~50% of serum Ca2+

the rest is bound to albumins, globulins, or anions (citrate, phosphate)

important to measure because ionized Ca2+ can be normal in presence of abnormal total serum Ca2+ or vice versa

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2
Q

how can albumin affect serum calcium levels?

A

much of blood Ca2+ is bound by albumin, but the active form of Ca2+ is ionized

low/high albumin can cause “pseudo-hypo/hypercalcemia” - ionized calcium is normal but there is low total serum calcium

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3
Q

how will the following affect blood calcium labs?
a. dehydration
b. nephrotic syndrome
c. cirrhosis

A

much of blood Ca2+ is bound by albumin, but the active form of Ca2+ is ionized

a. dehydration (high albumin) —> pseudo-hypercalcemia

b. nephrotic syndrome and c. cirrhosis (low albumin) —> pseudo-hypocalcemia

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4
Q

how can plasma pH alter calcium labs?

A

active calcium is in ionized form

acidemia (low pH) increases ionized calcium (and alkalemia lowers it)

so total serum calcium can be normal, but the active form (ionized) is not

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5
Q

how does hypercalcemia cause skeletal muscle weakness?

A

Ca2+ inhibits Na+ movement through voltage-gated channels —> decreased excitability

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6
Q

what is the effect of hypercalcemia on renal function?

A

decreases ability to concentrate urine (NKCC down-regulation, decreased aquaporin expression) —> polyuria, significant volume depletion

can also cause nephrolithiasis (calcium kidney stones)

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7
Q

what is the mechanism by which hypercalcemia shortens the QT interval?

A

L-type Ca2+ channels (plateau, phase 2) depend on intracellular Ca2+ to close

increased Ca2+ influx causes L-type channels to close earlier

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8
Q

what is the most common cause of primary hyperparathyroidism?

A

sporadic parathyroid adenoma: encapsulated lesions composed of neoplastic chief cells (monoclonal), 1 gland involved

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9
Q

how is primary hyperparathyroidism diagnosed? (2)

A
  1. lab: high calcium + low phosphate + high PTH
  2. imaging: ultrasound or sestamibi scan (nuclear medicine which is performed to localize parathyroid adenoma)
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10
Q

if a patient with hypercalcemia is found to have parathyroid hyperplasia (multiple glands involved), what disease should you consider?

A

consider multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) type 1 or 2A

type 1: parathyroid hyperplasia, pituitary tumor, pancreatic islet cell tumor (insulinoma) - esp. this type, primary hyperparathyroidism is commonly #1 presentation

type 2A: parathyroid hyperplasia, pheochromocytoma, medullary carcinoma of thyroid

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11
Q

when evaluating a patient with hypercalcemia, what are the first 3 steps?

A
  1. restore intravascular volume! Hypercalcemia can result in significant volume depletion
  2. confirm elevated ionized (active) Ca2+
  3. check PTH levels (is it PTH dependent or independent?)
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12
Q

what are the 3 major causes of hypercalcemia with low or undetectable PTH?

A
  1. malignancy (via PTHrP secretion by squamous cell cancer, renal cell carcinoma, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, multiple myeloma)
  2. medication (vitamin D, thiazides, milk-alkali)
  3. extra-renal vitamin D synthesis (granulomatous disease, lymphoma)
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13
Q

what is the triad of milk-alkali syndrome?

A

caused by ingestion of large amounts of calcium and absorbable alkali

  1. hypercalcemia with hypercalciuria —> diuresis
  2. metabolic alkalosis
  3. acute kidney injury
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14
Q

what is the most common cause of hypoparathyroidism in adults?

A

surgery - thyroidectomy, radial neck dissection (for squamous cell carcinoma of oropharynx), etc

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15
Q

what kind of drug is cinacalcet?

A

cinacalcet: calcimimetic used to treat end-stage renal disease —> reduces PTH secretion to treat bone demineralization caused by high PTH

binds to calcium-sensing receptors

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