Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-09 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:13


740 Hypercalcemia

➣FBH: elevated Ca, elevated or normal Mg, low or normal
P, inappropriately normal (85%) or slightly elevated (15%)
PTH
➣Vitamin D toxicity: elevated Ca, P, 25-OH vitamin D, suppressed
PTH and PTHrP
➣Lithium: elevated Ca and intact PTH
■Urine
➣Cancer and HPTH: elevated Ca excretion
➣Myeloma: Bence Jones protein or M-spike
➣FBH: reduced Ca excretion (<100 mg/24 hours); Ca/creatinine
clearance (0.01)
➣Vitamin D toxicity, granulomatous disease: marked hypercalci-
uria

Specific Diagnostic Tests
■Skeletal lesions and bone marrow plasmacytosis in myeloma
■Elevated ACE levels in sarcoidosis
■Mutations in 1, calcium-sensing receptor (FBH), menin (MEN 1),
and ret oncogene (MEN 2)

differential diagnosis
■Common cancers: lung, renal, breast, squamous cell, myeloma;
rarely non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma
■Primary HPTH
■Family history of hypercalcemia – FBH or MEN syndromes
■Granulomatous disease: sarcoidosis, tbc, coccidioidomycosis, histo-
plasmosis, cryptococcosis
■Thyrotoxicosis
■Drugs: thiazides, lithium, vitamin A and D
■Rare: milk-alkali syndrome, immobilization

management
What to Do First
■Assess severity of hypercalcemia, dehydration, mental status
changes, cardiovascular status; monitor urine output
■Hydration with normal saline (200–500 ml/hour) to restore intravas-
cular volume, loop diuretics (Lasix 20 to 40 mg IV every 2 to 4 hours)
to induce natriuresis after volume repletion
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