5-Minute Clinical Consult

Hypoparathyroidism

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Basics

Description

  • Deficient secretion of parathyroid hormone (PTH)
  • Acute hypoparathyroidism with associated hypocalcemia results in tetany, muscle cramps, carpopedal spasm, irritability, altered mental status, convulsion, stridor, and tingling of the circumoral area, hands, and feet.
  • Chronic: Lethargy, personality changes, anxiety, blurry vision, parkinsonism, mental retardation
  • Acquired hypoparathyroidism:
    • Surgical: Removal or damage to parathyroid glands or their blood supply. Thyroid, parathyroid, or radical neck surgery for head and neck cancers
    • Autoimmune: Isolated or combined with other endocrine deficiencies in polyglandular autoimmune (PGA) syndrome
    • Deposition of heavy metals in gland: Copper (Wilson's disease) or iron (hemochromatosis, thalassemias), radiation-induced destruction, and metastatic infiltration
    • Functional hypoparathyroidism: Associated with hypomagnesemia. Hypermagnesemia
    • Congenital:
      • Calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) abnormalities. Hypocalcemia with hypercalciuria
      • HDR or Barakat syndrome: Deafness, renal dysplasia
      • Familial: Mutations of the TBCE gene. Abnormal PTH secretions
      • 22q11.2 deletion syndrome
  • System(s) affected: Endocrine/Metabolic; Musculoskeletal; Nervous; Bones; Kidneys; Parathyroid
Pediatric Considerations
  • May occur in premature infants.
  • Neonates born to hypercalcemic mothers may experience suppression of developing parathyroid glands.
  • Congenital absence of parathyroids
  • May appear later in childhood as autoimmune or APS-1.

Geriatric Considerations
Hypocalcemia is fairly common in elderly; however, rarely secondary to hypoparathyroidism.

Pregnancy Considerations
Use of magnesium as a tocolytic may induce functional hypoparathyroidism.

Epidemiology

More common in women. Affects all ages.

Incidence
Most common after surgical procedure of the anterior neck. Transient hypoparathyroidism is seen after 24.1% of thyroidectomies, whereas permanent hypoparathyroidism 1.2–3.8%.

Prevalence
Wide variation. Autosomal-dominant hypocalcemia with hypercalciuria (ADHH): 1/70,000 typically in infancy with hypocalcemic seizures

Risk Factors

Neck surgery, especially thyroid, neck trauma, head and neck malignancies, family history of hypocalcemia, PGA syndrome

Genetics
  • Genetic defects may result in X-linked or in autosomal-recessive hypoparathyroidism due to abnormal parathyroid gland development. Associated with mutations in the transcription factor glial-cell missing B (BCMB)
  • Mutations in transcription factors or regulators of parathyroid gland development:
    • Hypoparathyroidism may present as a component of a larger genetic syndrome (APS-1 or DiGeorge syndrome) or in isolation (X-linked hypoparathyroidism).
    • May be autosomal–dominant (DiGeorge), autosomal recessive (APS-1), or X-linked recessive (X-linked hypoparathyroidism)
    • Congenital syndromes:
      • http://22q11.2 deletion syndrome, familial hypomagnesemia, hypoparathyroidism with lymphedema (1)
      • Hypoparathyroidism with sensorineural deafness
      • ADHH: Mutations gain-of-function of the CaSR gene suppressing the parathyroid gland, without elevation of PTH
    • PGA syndrome type 1: Mucocutaneous candidiasis, hypoparathyroidism, and Addison disease

General Prevention

Intraoperative identification and preservation of parathyroid tissue

Pathophysiology

  • PTH is involved in the control of serum ionized calcium levels:
    • Mobilizes calcium and phosphorus from bone stores
    • Stimulates formation of 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D
    • Stimulates reabsorption of calcium in the distal convoluted tubule and phosphate excretion in proximal tubule
  • Loss of PTH action results in hypocalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, and hypercalciuria.
  • Magnesium is crucial for PTH secretion and activation of the PTH receptor; hypo- or hypermagnesemia may result in functional hypoparathyroidism.

Etiology

  • Postsurgical: Transient, intermittent or permanent irradiation
  • Autoimmune: Genetic gain-of-function mutation in calcium-sensing receptor
  • Infiltrative: Metastatic carcinoma, hemochromatosis, Wilson disease, granulomas
  • Hypo- (alcoholics) or hypermagnesemia: Chronic iron overloads

Commonly Associated Conditions

  • DiGeorge syndrome
  • PGA syndrome type 1
  • Multiple endocrine deficiency autoimmune candidiasis (MEDAC) syndrome
  • Juvenile familial endocrinopathy
  • Hypoparathyroidism
  • Addison disease
  • Moniliasis (HAM) syndrome: A polyglandular deficiency syndrome, possibly genetic, characterized by hypoparathyroidism

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