Wikipedia - Hypercalcaemia

  (Redirected from Hypercalcemia)
Hypercalcaemia
Classification and external resources

Calcium
ICD-10 E83.5
ICD-9 275.42
DiseasesDB 6196
MedlinePlus 000365
eMedicine med/1068 emerg/260 ped/1062
MeSH D006934

Hypercalcaemia (in American English Hypercalcemia) is an elevated calcium level in the blood.[1] (Normal range: 9-10.5 mg/dL or 2.2-2.6 mmol/L). It can be an asymptomatic laboratory finding, but because an elevated calcium level is often indicative of other diseases, a diagnosis should be undertaken if it persists. It can be due to excessive skeletal calcium release, increased intestinal calcium absorption, or decreased renal calcium excretion.

Contents

[edit] Signs and symptoms

There is a general mnemonic for remembering the effects of hypercalcemia: "groans (constipation), moans (psychotic noise), bones (bone pain, especially if PTH is elevated), stones (kidney stones), and psychiatric overtones (including depression and confusion)."

Other symptoms can include fatigue, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, pancreatitis and increased urination.[citation needed]

Abnormal heart rhythms can result, and ECG findings of a short QT interval[2] and a widened T wave suggest hypercalcemia. Finally, peptic ulcers may also occur.

Symptoms are more common at high calcium blood values (12.0 mg/dL or 3 mmol/l). Severe hypercalcemia (above 15–16 mg/dL or 3.75-4 mmol/l) is considered a medical emergency: at these levels, coma and cardiac arrest can result.

[edit] Causes

Primary hyperparathyroidism and malignancy account for about 90% of cases of hypercalcemia. [3][4]

[edit] Abnormal parathyroid gland function

[edit] Malignancy

[edit] Vitamin-D metabolic disorders

[edit] Disorders related to high bone-turnover rates

[edit] Renal failure

[edit] Treatments

The goal of therapy is to treat the hypercalcemia first and subsequently effort is directed to treat the underlying cause.

[edit] Initial therapy: fluids and diuretics

  • hydration, increasing salt intake, and forced diuresis.
    • hydration is needed because many patients are dehydrated due to vomiting or renal defects in concentrating urine.
    • increased salt intake also can increase body fluid volume as well as increasing urine sodium excretion, which further increases urinary calcium excretion (In other words, calcium and sodium (salt) are handled in a similar way by the kidney. Anything that causes increased sodium (salt) excretion by the kidney will, en passant, cause increased calcium excretion by the kidney)
    • after rehydration, a loop diuretic such as furosemide can be given to permit continued large volume intravenous salt and water replacement while minimizing the risk of blood volume overload and pulmonary edema. In addition, loop diuretics tend to depress renal calcium reabsorption thereby helping to lower blood calcium levels
    • can usually decrease serum calcium by 1–3 mg/dL within 24 h
    • caution must be taken to prevent potassium or magnesium depletion

[edit] Additional therapy: bisphosphonates and calcitonin

  • bisphosphonates are pyrophosphate analogues with high affinity for bone, especially areas of high bone-turnover.
    • they are taken up by osteoclasts and inhibit osteoclastic bone resorption
    • current available drugs include (in order of potency): (1st gen) etidronate, (2nd gen) tiludronate, IV pamidronate, alendronate, risedronate, and (3rd gen) zoledronate
    • all patients with cancer-associated hypercalcemia should receive treatment with bisphosphonates since the 'first line' therapy (above) cannot be continued indefinitely nor is it without risk. Further, even if the 'first line' therapy has been effective, it is a virtual certainty that the hypercalcemia will recur in the patient with hypercalcemia of malignancy. Use of bisphoponates in such circumstances, then, becomes both therapeutic and preventative
    • patients in renal failure and hypercalcemia should have a risk-benefit analysis before being given bisphosphonates, since they are relatively contraindicated in renal failure.
  • Calcitonin blocks bone resorption and also increases urinary calcium excretion by inhibiting renal calcium reabsorption
    • Usually used in life-threatening hypercalcemia along with rehydration, diuresis, and bisphosphonates
    • Helps prevent recurrence of hypercalcemia
    • Dose is 4 Units per kg via subcutaneous or intramuscular route every 12 hours, usually not continued indefinitely

[edit] Other therapies

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ hypercalcemia at Dorland's Medical Dictionary
  2. ^ http://www.clevelandclinicmeded.com/medicalpubs/diseasemanagement/endocrinology/hypercalcemia/
  3. ^ Table 20-4 in: Mitchell, Richard Sheppard; Kumar, Vinay; Abbas, Abul K.; Fausto, Nelson. Robbins Basic Pathology. Philadelphia: Saunders. ISBN 1-4160-2973-7.  8th edition.
  4. ^ Tierney, Lawrence M.; McPhee, Stephen J.; Papadakis, Maxine A. (2006). Current Medical Diagnosis and Treatment 2007 (Current Medical Diagnosis and Treatment). McGraw-Hill Professional. pp. 901. ISBN 0-07-147247-9. 
  5. ^ Online 'Mendelian Inheritance in Man' (OMIM) 146200
  6. ^ Online 'Mendelian Inheritance in Man' (OMIM) 145980
  7. ^ Online 'Mendelian Inheritance in Man' (OMIM) 145981
  8. ^ Online 'Mendelian Inheritance in Man' (OMIM) 600740
  9. ^ Online 'Mendelian Inheritance in Man' (OMIM) 143880

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hypercalcaemia".

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