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Hyperparathyroidism affects between 0.5-0.1% of the population.
A usually slight elevation of plasma calcium is present (<3.00 mmol/L) in hyperparathyroidism, which is usually asymptomatic and picked up incidentally.
"Bones, stones, moans, groans, and psychiatric overtones."
Parathyroid adenomas are the most common cause (~80%), especially in young people.
20% caused by four gland hyperplasia (MEN I or II). Less than 1% is caused by carcinoma.
usually associated with renal failure
PTH secretion eith hypercalcemia due to a secondary cause, with no improvement with relief of initial cause.
symptoms include:
kidney stones and peptic ulcer disease are also common
Primary hyperparathyroidism is manifest by:
Secondary disease can cause:
Tertiary hyperparathyroidism can cause:
occurs after secondary disease and a loss of regulation results in the patient becoming
Sestamabi scanning can be used to identify the offending gland.
Surgical exploration and removal of the enlarged gland, along with biopsy of a normal-appearing gland, is often done with parathyroid adenoma.
On occasion, an offending gland is not present in normal position. Finding it is imperative, as can be done by sestamabi scanning, CT, or MRI. The thymus is the most common location.
Sestamabi scan identifying enlarged gland allows for minimally invasive therapy.
If patients with elevated PTH are asymptomatic, most surgeons would defer surgical exploration.
avoid thiazides
Other treatments include: hydration, ambulation, , bisphosphonates
created: DLP, Aug 09
authors: DLP, Aug 09
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