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Thyroid  (Expert Forum)
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hypercalcemia with low associated PTH- follow up.
Answered by
Mark Lupo, M.D. - Thyroid Nodules, Thyroid Cancer, hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism, Thyroid Ultrasound
Thyroid & Endocrine Center of Florida Sarasota - FL
Questions in the Thyroid forum are answered by Dr. Mark Lupo. Topics covered include goiter, graves disease, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, hyperthyroid, hypothyroid, thyroid cancers, thyroiditis, and thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH).

hypercalcemia with low associated PTH- follow up.

by caravan25, Apr 21, 2006 12:00AM
I wrote a month ago about an incidental finding of hypercalcemia (11.4) during a check up, with low-normal PTH. CT of chest/abdomen with normal results. Since then serum calcium returned to normal range (10.6). Have been under the care of an endo. Initial tests revealed normal 24 urine calcium, low-normal phosphorus, vitamin D deficiency. On vitamin D treatment for a little over a month, and new test results reveal: normal calcium (10.6 again) PTH of 15 (originally 12), phosphorus has risen to mid-normal, but bone density scan (taken early on in the Vitamin D treatment) reports osteopenia in spine (-2.3). Endo. will be putting me on phosphorus meds and I will continue vitamin D. But isn't osteopenia a little odd for a 32 year old male? My Endo. seems unworried, as long as treatment is successful. Could the osteopenia-phosphorus-vitamin D relationship have been causing hypercalcemia? I have admittedly lacked in dietary intake of calcium and vitamin D since @ age 4 (refused to drink milk, still eat very little dairy). I may have also lost some height (less than an inch) in the last few years. Could this all be a manifestation of a more serious bone-related disease? Is primary hyperpara. completely out of the question because of PTH? Anything else I should be doing?



Thank you.

by Mark Lupo, M.D., Apr 24, 2006 12:00AM
Make sure both 25 and 1,25 Vit D forms were checked.



PTH would be usually elevated in vit D deficiency and the history does not seem to be primary HPTH



Would consider osteomalacia as a possibility.



Go by Z scores and not T scores (ie which was the -2.3) in male



You may have never fully formed bone given low diet intake of ca/vit d



Make sure sprue is tested for and testosterone is looked at as well as thyroid function.



Good luck.
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