End 11 - Calcium Metabolism Flashcards

1
Q

How many parathyroid glands are in the thyroid gland and where are they located?

A

There are 4 parathyroid glands located on the posterior surface of the thyroid gland: 2 inferior and 2 superior.

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2
Q

Where do the parathyroid glands come from?

A

From the brachial apparatus: from the 3 and 4th brachial pouches.

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3
Q

What are the 2 main cell types of the parathyroid glands and what do they do?

A

Chief cells: AKA principal cells, they produce PTH. Oxyphil cells: unknown function, they are packed w/ mitochondria, appear at puberty and increase with age.

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4
Q

How is parathyroid glands controlled?

A

The cervical sympathetic ganglia control the flow of blood into the parathyroid.

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5
Q

What does the Parathyroid hormone do?

A

It increase serum calcium in 3 different ways: Ramp up osteoclasts by binding into osteoblasts to release RANKL which stimulate osteoclasts. It increases Ca2+ reabsorption in the distal convoluted tubule and upregulates 1-alpha hydroxylase which converts vitamin D to calcitriol. Calcitriol acts to increase Ca2+ absorption in the gut. Also reduces serum phosphate: osteoclasts dump phosphate into the blood, and the kidneys secrete phosphate into the urine.

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6
Q

What stimulates PTH release?

A

Low serum calcium. Magnesium: if low, it secretes PTH but if low for prolonged or severely low, the it decreases PTH secretion.

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7
Q

What would cause low Magnesium levels?

A

Diuresis. Alcohol. Diarrhea. Aminoglycosides.

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8
Q

Which cell produces Calcitonin?

A

By the parafollicular cells (or C-cells) of the thyroid.

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9
Q

What is the embryologic origin of Parafollicular cells?

A

Neural crest cells.

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10
Q

What does Calcitonin do?

A

It decreases bone reabsorption of Ca2+. Doesn’t play a role in Ca2+ metabolism.

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11
Q

What kind of cancer is a parafollicular cell tumor?

A

Medullary Thyroid carcinoma.

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12
Q

What are the 90% of causes of Hypercalcemia?

A

90% are due to Primary hyperparathyroidism (95% solitary parathyroid adenoma, 5% parathyroid hyperplasia) or Malignancy (squamous cell cancers like the lung via PTH-related peptide, renal cell carcinoma, breast metastasis, multiple myeloma via local osteolytic factors).

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13
Q

What are the 10% of the causes of Hypercalcemia?

A

Excess vitamin D ingestion. Excess antacid ingestion (milk-alkali syndrome). Granulomatous disease (excess vitamin D due to sarcoid or TB). Increased bone turnover (hyperthyroidism, vitamin A intox, immobilization). Thiazide diuretics (leads to decreased renal excretion of calcium).

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14
Q

What is primary hyperparathyroidism?

A

The parathyroid gland is making excess PTH just by itself. 95% is due to solitary parathyroid adenoma. 5% is due to parathyroid hyperplasia. High Alk Phos because of increased bone turnover.

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15
Q

Which syndrome is associated with parathyroid adenomas? Which one for parathyroid hyperplasia?

A

MEN 1 is associated w/ parathyroid adenomas. MEN 2A is associated w/ parathyroid hyperplasia.

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16
Q

What is secondary hyperparathyroidism? What lab values does it present?

A

Where you have Chronic hypocalcemia (maybe due to chronic renal disease where you can’t make calcitriol, and w/o calcitriol, you can’t absorb much Ca2+ in the gut). This increases PTH secretion, which causes osteodystrophy. Low calcium, high phosphate (Cant throw away phosphate due to renal failure), high PTH. High Alk Phos because of increased bone turnover.

17
Q

What is Terciary Hyperparathyroidism?

A

Chronic renal disease and parathyroid hyperplasia (working autonomously), but instead of elevation of PTH response to low Ca2+, now the PTH is high even if Ca2+ is high.

18
Q

What are the 4 causes of hypoparathyroidism?

A

Parathyroidectomy (from dmg during thyroidectomy). Autoimmune destructionof parathyroids. Pseudohypoparathyroidism (kidneys unresponsive to PTH). DiGeorge syndrome.

19
Q

What are the four causes of Hypocalcemia?

A

Hypoparathyroidism. Poor calcium intake. Vit D deficiency (nutritional deficiency and paucity of sunlight, chronic renal failure). Acute pancreatitis.

20
Q

What are the 2 classic signs of hypocalcemia?

A

Chvostek’s sign (tap the CHeek, which stimulate the facial nerve and causes contraction of the facial muscles). Trousseau’s sign (Tighten a BP cuff on the arm causing Carpopedal spasms).

21
Q

What are the 3 functions of vitamin D?

A

Increase dietary absorption of Ca2+. Increase dietary absorption of phosphate. Increases bone resorption of Ca2+ and phosphate.

22
Q

How does PTH affect calcium?

A

PTH affects calcium by increasing bone resorption of calcium and increasing renal reabsorption of calcium.

23
Q

How does PTH affect phosphate?

A

PTH thrashes phosphate: it pulls phosphate from the bone and excretes it in the urine.

24
Q

RFF: Most common cause of hypercalcemia.

A

Primary hyperparathyroidism.

25
Q

RFF: most common cause of primary hyperparathyroidism.

A

Parathyroid adenoma.

26
Q

RFF: Most common cause of secondary hyperparathyroidism.

A

Chronic renal failure.

27
Q

RFF: Most common cause of hypoparathyroidism.

A

Accidental Parathyroidectomy.

28
Q

RFF: Facial muscle spams when tapping on the cheek.

A

Chvostek’s sign.

29
Q

RFF: Parathyroid, pancreatic, and pituitary tumors.

A

MEN 1.