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Clinical features

Authoring team

"Bones, moans and stones" is the classical description of hyperparathyroidism but such clear cases are uncommon in the Wesren world.
Patients with primary hyperparathyroidism may:

  • present with symptoms of hypercalcaemia or PTH excess
  • be asymptomatic (hypercalcaemia detected incidentally) - more commonly seen

Symptomatic hypercalcaemia:

  • in the Western world this variant accounts for only 20-30% of patients while in the developing countries most patients still present with symptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism
  • symptoms may include:
    • renal manifestations - nephrolithiasis (most common), polyuria, and renal insufficiency
    • bone pathology
      • fragility fractures
      • low bone mineral density, with preferential bone loss at sites rich in cortical bone
      • osteitis fibrosa cystic - classical primary hyperparathyroid bone disease characterised by generalised demineralisation of the skeleton, subperiosteal bone resorption, and the development of bone cysts
    • gastrointestinal symptoms - nausea, peptic ulcer disease, constipation, pancreatitis (uncommon)
    • neurospsychiatric disturbances - depression, lethargy, and decreased cognitive and social function which may progress into psychosis and coma in severe hypercalcaemia,
    • gout and pseudogout – may be associated with primary hyperparathyroidism
    • cardiovascular manifestations
      • seen in severe primary hyperparathyroidism
      • includes left ventricular hypertrophy, cardiac calcification, conduction abnormalities, endothelial dysfunction, and a shortened QT interval.

Asymptomatic hypercalcaemia

  • diagonsed during routine screening or during assessement for low bone mineral density
  • patienta may have non specific symptoms of mild hypecalcaemia e.g. - fatigue, mild depression or malaise

Normocalcaemic hyperparatyroidism

  • patients with normal serum calcium but elevated PTH
  • may be identified during evaluation of osteoporosis or a fragility fracture (a raised PTH is identified on further assessment of the osteoporosis)
  • vitamin D inadequacy and renal impairment which present with increased PTH values and normal serum calcium should be excluded

Features attributable to hypercalcaemia may be evident in primary and tertiary hyperparathyroidism.

  • in secondary hyperparathyroidism, the clinical picture may be complicated by hypocalcaemia. In chronic renal failure, co-existent osteomalacia results in renal osteodystrophy

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