ETIOLOGY
- Failure of parathyroid gland:
- Autoimmune destruction
- Surgical interruption of blood supply or gland removal
- Radiation damage
- Hypomagnesemia (PTH cofactor)
- End-organ unresponsiveness to PTH
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
ALERT
The most common symptomatic presentation is postoperatively after parathyroidectomy.
Pediatric Considerations
Neonates/infants:
- Transient hypoparathyroidism in 1st yr of life
- Below normal intelligence proportional to duration of hypocalcemia
- Dental hypoplasia
History
- Most common presentation is in the postoperative period after parathyroidectomy or thyroidectomy
- Prolonged severe hypomagnesemia, in the alcoholic or high-dose diuretic patient, is the next most common presentation and can be slow in onset; usually less symptomatic
Physical-Exam
- Related to severity, rapidity of onset, and duration of hypocalcemia
- General:
- Neuromuscular:
- Paresthesias (especially circumoral and extremities)
- Carpal pedal spasm
- Latent spasm elicited by:
- Chvostek sign (twitching of circumoral muscles after tapping facial nerve in front of the tragus)
- Trousseau sign (spasm after inflating BP cuff 20 mm above patient’s systolic BP for 3 min)
- Laryngospasm/bronchospasm
- Blepharospasm
- Muscle cramps
- Tetany
- Seizures (presenting symptom of 1/3 with hypoparathyroidism)
- Increased intracranial pressure (ICP) with papilledema
- Parkinson syndrome and other extrapyramidal disorders
- Myelopathy
- Cardiovascular:
- Prolonged QT interval (owing to ST-segment prolongation)
- Heart block
- CHF
- Ventricular fibrillation (VFib)
- Vasoconstriction
- Psychiatric:
- Impaired memory
- Confusion
- Hallucinations
- Dementia
- Dermatologic:
- Brittle hair and nails
- Psoriasis
- Hyperpigmentation:
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- If
no hypocalcemic symptoms
with hypocalcemia, check albumin level:
- If still low after correcting for hypoalbuminemia, check ionized Ca
2+
- If
hypocalcemic symptoms
with normal total Ca
2+
, check pH for alkalosis:
- If not alkalotic, check ionized Ca
2+
(active form)
- Metabolic or respiratory alkalosis increases the binding to albumin reducing the ionized Ca
2+
- If
hypocalcemic symptoms
with low ionized Ca
2+
, check a PTH level:
- Low in primary hypoparathyroidism and in vitamin D deficiency
- Elevated in pseudohypoparathyroidism and hypocalcemia from renal failure
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Calcium: Correct for albumin using formula:
- Corrected Ca
2+
(mg/dL) = measured Ca
2+
(mg/dL) + 0.8[4.0 – albumin (g/dL)]
- Ionized Ca
2+
if symptomatic with low total calcium
- Electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, glucose
- Magnesium
- Arterial blood gas (ABG) if symptomatic with normal total Ca
2+
- Elevation of 0.1 pH unit decreases the ionized Ca
2+
by 3–8%.
- Phosphorus:
- Elevated except when hypocalcemia caused by vitamin D deficiency
- Metastatic calcification can cause hypocalcemia by tissue deposition when the calcium/phosphorus product is >60.
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
ECG:
- Prolonged QT interval:
- Owing to ST-segment prolongation from hypocalcemia
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Must differentiate from a variety of causes of hypocalcemia
- Lab artifact:
- Low total calcium that is normal when corrected for albumin level with no symptoms of hypocalcemia
- Alkalosis:
- Symptomatic hypocalcemia with a normal total calcium
- Hypomagnesemia (needed for PTH secretion)
- PTH resistance (congenital)
- Vitamin D deficiency (low Ca
2+
+ low PO
4
):
- Anticonvulsant use (decreased vitamin D absorption)
- Liver disease
- Resistance to vitamin D
- Malabsorption or dietary deficiency
- Gram-negative sepsis
- Renal failure or nephrotic syndrome
- Chelation:
- Pancreatitis (fatty acids chelate calcium)
- Ammonium bifluoride (tire cleaner spray)
- Hydrofluoric acid
- Citrated blood
- Acute hyperphosphatemia:
- Fleet enemas
- Rhabdomyolysis
- Acute renal failure
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Administer calcium in refractory VFib or status epilepticus in addition to usual medications if known hypoparathyroidism or suspected hypocalcemia
- Stridor may herald laryngospasm
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Airway, breathing, and circulation management (ABCs):
- Manage airway if laryngospasm
- Administer IV calcium bolus (chloride or gluconate) if unstable cardiac rhythm or tetany:
- Slow infusion much safer unless patient markedly symptomatic
- Prepare for ventricular dysrhythmias including VFib.
- Seizure precautions
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Calcium replacement:
- Calcium chloride 10% (27.2 mg elemental Ca
2+
/mL):
- For life-threatening conditions: 10 mL (1 g) IV over 5 min OR
- Calcium gluconate 10% (9 mg elemental Ca
2+
/mL):
- For life-threatening conditions: 20–30 mL (2–3 g) over 3–5 min
- For non–life-threatening conditions, administer calcium via slow infusion of 500–1,000 mg elemental Ca
2+
over 6–24 hr (peds: 100 mg elemental Ca
2+
/kg/24 hr)
- Continuous cardiac monitoring
- Stop infusion if bradycardia develops
- Perform frequent checks of serum Ca
2+
levels
- Calcium administration may precipitate digitalis toxicity
- Supplement to lowest possible Ca
2+
level keeping the patient asymptomatic, then switch to oral replacement:
- Soft tissue calcification may occur with calcium/phosphorus product of 60 (Ca × PO
4
)
- Replace magnesium if low
- Bind phosphorus:
- Aluminum hydroxide–containing antacids (Maalox, Mylanta, or Gelusil) if creatinine <2
- Calcium acetate (Phoslo) or calcium carbonate when concurrent renal failure if creatinine >2
- Sevelamer HCl or carbonate (Renagel, Renvela)
- Vitamin D supplementation
- Avoid carbonated beverages (high in phosphorus)
- Assess for associated endocrinopathies
MEDICATION
First Line
- Calcium gluconate: 10% (9 mg elemental Ca
2+
/mL): 20–30 mL over 3–5 min if life-threatening condition; otherwise, slow infusion (peds: 20 mg/kg of calcium gluconate 10% or 2 mg/kg elemental Ca):
- Follow with slow infusion: Calcium gluconate 10 g in liter of 5% dextrose infusedat 1–3 mg/kg/h in adults
- Calcium gluconate has lower risk of venous irritation or extravasational injury compared to calcium chloride
- Magnesium sulfate: 2 g IV (peds: 25–50 mg/kg up to 2 g) over 2 hr—if severe, 6 g over 6 hr
- Calcium chloride 10% (27.2 mg elemental Ca
2+
/mL): 10 mL (1 g) IV over 5 min if life-threatening condition; otherwise, slow infusion
Second Line
- Calcium acetate: 667 mg (169 mg elemental Ca): 1 or 2 tabs TID with meals
- Calcium carbonate: 1,250 mg (500 mg elemental Ca): 1 or 2 tabs QID (2–4 g/d) (peds: 45–65 mg elemental Ca mg/kg/d div. QID)
- Sevelamer (Renagel, Renvela) 800 mg: 1 or 2 tabs TID with meals
- Magnesium oxide 400 mg: 1 tab daily or BID
- Vitamin D: 400 IU PO daily for supplement (if not responsive to standard supplement, then consider calcitriol (1,25(OH)
2
-D) 0.25 μg daily; titrate to 0.5–2 μg/d):
- Preferred over other long-acting vitamin D analogues due to patient availability and lower cost, quicker onset and offset of action
- Thiazide diuretics: HCTZ 25 100 mg daily
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Symptomatic hypocalcemia
- Abnormal ECG
- Inability to take vitamin D or calcium orally
- Corrected calcium <5 mg/dL
Discharge Criteria
- Asymptomatic hypocalcemia
- Not meeting any admission criteria
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- Any patient requiring therapy or needing follow-up lab studies
- Repeat of calcium, phosphorus, magnesium levels in 1–2 days