Parathyroid disease
- The Parathyroid gland regulates the serum concentration of ionized calcium.
Hyperparathyroidism
three types of Hyperparathyroidism
- primary
- Parathyroid hyperplasia due to :
- parathyroid adenomas/maligancy
- MEN 1, MEN2
- Parathyroid hyperplasia due to :
- secondary – Hyperplasia that is secondary to another disease process
- Vitamin D deficiency
- weight loss surgery
- Celiac or Crohn’s Disease
- Chronic kidney disease
[CKD → impaired renal phosphate excretion → ↑ phosphate blood levels→ ↑ PTH secretion]
[CKD → ↓ biosynthesis of active vitamin D → ↓ intestinal calcium resorption and ↓ renal calcium reabsorption → hypocalcemia → ↑ PTH secretion]
- tertiary
- results from untreated secondary HPT with continuously elevated PTH levels, even if the original stimulus is removed
- Renal disease
- secondary or tertiary hyperparathyroidism → renal osteodystrophy → bone lesions
Other:
- Lithium therapy
- Ectopic PTH secretion from non-parathyroid malignancy
Presentation
- The classic signs and symptoms of hyperparathyroidism are usually seen late in the disease process.
- When calcium levels are >12mg/dL patients are usually symptomatic and will present with:
- Stones – kidney stones, hematirua
- Bones – Bone, muscle, and joint pain, Pseudogout
- Abdominal groans – Lack of appetite → weight loss, Nausea, constipation, Gastric or duodenal ulcers, Acute pancreatitis
- Psychic moans – depression, fatigue, anxiety, sleep disorders
Hypoparathyroidism (failing parathyroid function or frank hypoparathyroidism)
- Post thyroid surgery or radiation
- Autoimmune endocrine disease
- Severe hypomagnesaemia (see in alcoholics and in cases of really bad malabsorption due to another disease process)
Investigations
Calcium | Phosphate | ALP | PTH | |
Primary | Blood: high Urine: Hypercalciuria (Ca/Cr > 0.02) | low | HIGH | HIGH |
Secondary | Normal or Low | Normal or high (in CKD) Low (in most other causes) | HIGH | HIGH |
Tertiary | HIGH | HIGH | HIGH | Very HIGH |