Title: HYPERCALCEMIA
1HYPERCALCEMIA
- SYED NASRAT IMAM, MD
- The Chicago Medical School
- Chicago, IL
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
2CALCIUM
- An essential intracellular and extracellular
cation - Extracellular calcium is required to maintain
normal biological function of nervous system, the
musculoskeletal system, and blood coagulation - Intracellular calcium is needed for normal
activity of many enzymes - Preservation of the integrity of cellular
membrane - Regulation of endocrine and exocrine secretory
activities - Activation of compliment system
- Bone metabolism
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
3CALCIUM
- Respiratory alkalosis and elevated pH cause
increase in the binding of calcium and lowers
ionized calcium. Decrease in pH has the opposite
effect. As a general rule a shift of 0.1 pH unit
produces a change in ionized calcium of 0.04 to
0.05 mmol/L - Chelators such as citrate may transiently
decrease ionized calcium - Total body Ca -1 to 1.5 kg, 99- skeleton, 0.1
ECF , rest intracellular. - One gram per deciliter of albumin binds
approximately 0.8 mg/dl of calcium
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
4FORMULA
- 0.8 for each gm of Albumin
- 0.16mg/dl for each gm of globulin.
- (Uca/Pca) (Ucr/Pcr) FEca
lt1 - Familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia, FEca
gt2 - primary hyperparathyroidism - ?? in pH will ?? protein bound Ca by 0.12mg/dl
- 80-90 of protein bound Ca is bound to Albumin.
- Increase in serum pH of 0.1 may cause decrease in
ionized Ca of 0.16mg/dl - Calcium Protein bound - 40 Complexed - 13
Ionized fraction - 47
FEca
Uca/Pca x Pcr/Ucr
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
5CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
- GI- Anorexia, Nausea, Vomiting, Constipation and
rarely acute Pancreatitis. - CVS- Hypertension, shortened QT interval, and
enhanced sensitivity to digitalis. - RENAL- Polyuria, Polydipsia, and occasionally
Nephrocalcinosis. - CNS- Cognitive difficulties, Apathy, Drowsiness,
Obtundation, or even Coma.
Most common symptom is probably nocturia
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
6SYMPTONS
- More than 50 of all patients with primary
hyperparathyroidism are asymptomatic when
hypercalcemia is first discovered. - Diagnostic Finding Frequency ()
Likelihood Ratio
In Primary HPT
In Malignancy Finding nt Finding
-nt Renal Calculi 29 4
7.3 0.74 Peptic Ulcer 13
10 1.3
0.97 Hypertension 49 25 2
0.68 Polyuria 22 29 0.76
1.1 Mental status change 23 33 0.7
1.1 GI Distress 25 34 0.74
1.1 Muscular weakness 32 36 0.89
1.1 Bone Pain 28 58 0.48
1.7 Constipation 19 58 0.33
1.9 Weight Loss 19 64 0.30
2.3 Anorexia 19 64 0.30
2.3 Fatigue 31 73 0.42 2.6
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
7SIGNS
Band keratopathy The deposition of Ca as
corneal opacities is usually sign of long
standing hypercalcemia -most commonly associated
with primary hyperparathyroidism. Calcium
deposition begins near the limbus at the 3 9
oclock position, presumbly because there is less
friction from the lids near the limbus because
the tear film is most alkaline in the most
exposed area, band running across the cornea from
the 3 to 9 oclock position
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
8SIGNS
Bony tenderness Hyperactive tendon reflexes
Tongue fasciculations Hypercalcemia in pregnant
female may cause hypocalcemia in her neonates by
suppressing the fetal parathyroid. Hypercalcemia
- small dec. in GFR - due to hemodynamic effects
hyposthenuria (a loss of renal concentrating
abilities)
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
9COMPLICATIONS Sinus bradycardia Increase in
the degree of a heart block Cardiac
arrhythmia HTN Pancreatitis PUD
Nephrolithiasis Accelerated vascular
calcification
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
10CALCIUM HOMEOSTASIS
THREE HORMONE AND THREE ORGAN
- PTH
- ACTIVATED VITAMIN D
- CALCITONIN
- BONE
- KIDNEY
- SMALL INTESTINE
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
11THREE HORMONES
- PTH (84 amino acid)
- Actions on Bone Actions on Kidney
Actions on GI - Parathyroid cells are unusual in the respect
that hormone degradation rather than synthesis is
adjusted according to physiological demand. As
much as 90 can be destroyed within the chief
cells. - If blood levels of ionized calcium drop by as
little as 0.1 mg/dl, secretion of PTH is
stimulated - Half-life of PTH is minutesKidney reacts
quickly to changes in PTH and is responsible for
minute to minute adjustments of blood calcium. - PTH acts directly on distal portion of the
nephron to decrease urinary excretion of calcium
mediated by cAMP. - PTH powerfully inhibits tubular reabsorption of
phosphate and thus increases the amount excreted
in the urine, mainly in proximal tubules - PTH stimulates the renal enzyme that converts vit
D to its active form but has no direct effects on
intestinal transport of calcium or phosphate. - Action of PTH to increase 1,25(OH)2D is blunted
in hyperphosphatemia
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
12- ACTIONS OF PARATHYROID HORMONE
- The principal regulator of calcium concentration
in extracellular fluid - Increases the calcium concentration and
decreases the phosphate concentration in the
blood. - Bone responds in 2-3 hours 1st phase to small
increases of PTH. PTH?Receptors on surface
osteocytes? intervention of GTP binding
protein?activates adenylate cyclase?Increases
permeability to of osteocytes to calcium in
surrounding bone fluid compartment?Calcium enters
cytosol and then extruded to ECF compartment on
other side of bone membrane and shifts
equilibrium to solubilization - 2nd phase- becomes evident about 12 hours later
characterized by widespread resorbtion of both
mineral and organic components of matrix.
Osteoclastic activity predominates - Activity of all bone cell types is increased by
PTH but only osteocytes and osteoblasts have
receptors for PTH. Activation of and
recruitment of osteoclasts must be accomplished
indirectly by some paracrine or endocrine signal
produced by osteocytes and osteoblasts
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
13VITAMIN D
- Activated Vit D
- GI - increase Ca absorption.
- Bone - increase Ca mobilization.
- Kidney - increase reabsorption within the distal
tubule. - Deficiency of vitamin D severely impairs
intestinal transport of both calcium and
phosphorous - Mineralization of osteoid occurs spontaneously
when adequate amounts of calcium and phosphorous
are available - 1,25(OH)2D3 increases the number and activity of
osteoclasts but osteoblasts have the receptors - Effect on calcium absorption in the distal
nephron Regulation- Hydroxylation of carbon 1
by cells in the proximal tubules of the kidney
which converts a nearly inactive precursor to a
highly active hormone is stimulated primarily by
PTH and by low phosphate concentrations.
1,25(OH)2D3 inhibits hydroxylation of carbon in
the kidney and carbon 25 in the liver and
stimulates hydroxylation of carbon 24 which
diverts precursor to a degradative pathway.
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
14- CALCITONIN ( 32 amino acid )
- Parafollicular cells of the Thyroid gland in
response of hypercalcemia - Decrease osteoclast activity.
- Stimulating a distal tubular - mediated
calciuresis. - Other hormones affecting calcium balance - many
including prostaglandins that mobilize calcium,
various growth factors, growth hormone,
somatomedins, thyroid hormones(decrease skeletal
mass), gonadal hormones which help maintain bone
mass, adrenal cortical hormones
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
15TARGET ORGAN
- Small intestine approx. 40 absorbed, 50 of
that - excreted into bile and other intestinal
secretions. So only 20 of the total amount of Ca
ingested daily is available to circulate between
bone and extracellular fluid. - Kidney Glumerulus filters out the Ca that is
not bound to protein. - Proximal tubule - approx. 50 to 70 is
reabsorbed, Ca reabsorption mirrors Na
reabsorption. - Ascending limb of the loop of henle - approx.
30 to 40 reabsorbed - Distal nephron - about 10 reabsorbed. PTH and
activated Vit D increases Ca absorption during
Ca deficient states. - Normally kidney excretes approx. 200 mg /day of
Ca to maintain homeostasis. During states of
severe Ca depletion, the Kidney can decrease
urinary excretion to 50mg /day or less.
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
16CALCIUM REGULATION
_
PTH
_
1,25(OH)2 D3
CALCITONIN
_
ECF Pool of Calcium
GI Tract
BONE
URINE
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
17ETIOLOGY
Approx. 80 of all cases are caused by
Malignancy or Primary Hyperpathyroidism
- T Thiazide, other drugs - Lithium
- R Rabdomyolysis
- A AIDS
- P Pagets disease, Parental nutrition,
Pheochromocytoma, Parathyroid disease
- V Vitamins
- I Immobilization
- T Thyrotoxicosis
- A Addisons disease
- M Milk-alkali syndrome
- I Inflammatory disorders
- N Neoplastic related disease
- S Sarcoidosis
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
18HYPERPARATHYROIDISM
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
19HYPERPARATHYROIDISM
- STONES,
- BONES,
- GROANS, AND
- MOANS
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
20Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
21Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
22PARATHYROIDECTOMY
- A serum calcium gt 12mg/dl
- Hypercalciuria gt 400mg/d
- Presence of sign and symptoms--S,B,G,M
- Markedly reduced cortical bone density
- Hypercalcemia causing decreased GFR
- Patient age under 50 years?
- NIH consensus development conference
recommendation
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
23TREATMENT OPTION
- Gallium nitrate.
- Steroids.
- IV Phosphate.
- Dialysis.
- Others.
- Hydration.
- Furosemide.
- Bisphosphanate.
- Calcitonin.
- Mithramycin.
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
24HYDRATION
- First step in the management of severe
hypercalcemia. --isotonic saline. - Usually reduces - 1.6-2.4mg/dl.
- Hydration alone rarely leads to normalization in
severe hypercalcemia. - Rate of IV saline based on severity of
hypercalcemia and tolerance of CVS for volume
expansion.
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
25LOOP DIURETICS
- Facilitate urinary excretion of calcium
- By inhibiting calcium reabsorption in the thick
ascending limb of the loop of Henle. - Guard against volume overload
- Volume expansion must precede the administration
of furosemide, because the drugs effect depends
on delivery of calcium to the ascending limb.
Needs frequent measurement of lytes and water
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
26- CALCITONIN Not as effective as
bisphosphonate, tachyphylaxis quickly occurs and
limits therapeutic efficacy - MITHRAMYCIN Toxic effect limits its use,
reserved for difficult cases of hypercalcemia
that are related to malignancy - GALLIUM NITRATE Need to infuse it over 5
days, nephrotoxity limits its use, not used
frequently - CORTICOSTEROIDS For myeloma, lymphoma,
Sarcoidosis, or vit D toxicity decrease GI
absorption, 200-300mg hydrocort for upto 5 days,
slow response limits its use - HEMODIALYSIS Zero or low calcium bath, In
selected condition, eg-hypercalcemia complicated
by renal failure
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
27BISPHOSPHONATE
- Structurally related to pyrophosphate. P-C-P
bound is a back bone that renders them resistant
to phosphates. They bind to hydroxyapatite in
bone and inhibit the dessolution of crystals.
Their great affinity for bone and their
resistance to degradation account for their
extremely long half life in bone. - Poor GI absorption- lt10
- ETIDRONATE PAMIDRONATE CLODRONATE
- Etidronate- 7.5mg/kg iv over 4 hr for 3-7 days,
S. ca begins to decrease within 2 days after
first dose. Response better if pt well hydrated
before t/t. Oral to prevent recurrent
hypercalcemia.. Adverse effect-increase s. cr,
phosphate, long term use-impair bone formation,
osteomalacia,
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
28PAMIDRONATE
- Inhibits osteoclast function
- The most potent bisphosphonate.
- 60mg to 90 mg IV over 24hr.
- 70 to 100 of patients had decreased s. calcium
within 24 hr of t/t, 2/3rd of this group had
normal s cal within 7 days. - Adverse effect- mild transient increase in
temp(lt2deg C), transient leukopenia, small
reduction in s phosphate level. - Excreted by kidney- dose adjustment.
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
29MITHRAMYCIN
- An inhibitor of RNA synthesis in osteoclasts
- IV 25 microgram/kg over 4-6 hr.
- Begins to decrease in 12hr, maxm in 48-72 hr.
- Duration of normocalcemia ranges from a few days
to several wks. Depending on the extent of
ongoing bone resorption. - Adverse effect- Nausea- can be mini- by slow iv.
Avoid extravasation-cellulitis.Hepatotoxic- in
20 pt. Nephrotoxic- increase s. cr, proteinuria.
Thrombocytopenia. - Contraindication-liver, kidney dysfunction,
thrombocytopenia, or any coagulopathy.
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
30GALLIUM NITRATE
- Inhibit bone resorption by adsorbing to and
reducing the solubility of hydroxyapatite
crystals. - Adverse effect- Nephrotoxity, hypophosphatemia,
small reduction in Hb concentration. - Clinical experience limited.
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
31OTHERS
- GLUCOCORTICOIDS- inhibiting the growth of
neoplastic lymphoid tissue, counteracting the
effects of vitamin D. - PHOSPHATE- Can lower rapidly and profoundly, but
very dangerous. Restricted to pt with extreme,
life threatening hypercalcemia in whom all other
measure failed. Hyperphosphatemia and azotemia
are contraindications. - AMIFOSTINE(WR-2721) PG
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
32CHOICE OF AGENT
- Mild (lt3 mmol/l)-Hydration with saline.
- Moderate(gt3.5mmol/l) with moderate symptoms-
Bisphosphonate. - Severe life threatening( gt4mmol/l) - Saline
Calcitonin mithramycin,alternatively
bisphosphonate, if steroids sensitive
steroids. Hypercalcemia secondary to
malignancy- survival after the appearance of
hypercalcemia is very poor - median of 3 months.
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD
33REFERENCES
- Recognizing hypercalcemia The 3-hormone,
3-organ rule-Gregory W. Rutecki, MD and
Frederick C. Whittier, MD, The journal Of
Critical Illness. Vol 13, no. 1.Jan 1998 - Management Of Acute Hypercalcemia, John P.
Bilezikian, MD, The New England Journal Of
Medicine,vol 326, No 18, April 30, 1992. - Cecils Text Book Of Internal Medicine
- Harrisons Principle Of Internal Medicine.
- Renal and Electrolyte Disorders, Vth edition,
Robert W. Schrier. - Potts Jt, ed. 1991 NIH Consensus Development
Conference Statement on Primary
Hyperparathyroidism. J Bone Miner Res.
19916s9-s13 - Mallette LE. The Hypercalcemia. Semin Nephro.
199212159-190. - Edelson GW, Kleenehoper M. Hypercalcemic crisis.
Med Clin North Am. 19957979-92
Syed Nasrat Imam, MD