Persisting Hypocalcemia After Surgical Parathyroidectomy: The Differential Effectiveness of Calcium Citrate Versus Calcium Carbonate With Acid Suppression.

Journal: The American Journal Of The Medical Sciences
Published:
Abstract

The effectiveness of oral calcium (Ca) may be contingent on a patient׳s factors beyond compliance, such as proton-pump inhibitor use and the choice of calcium supplements. A 32-year-old Hispanic male with end-stage renal disease on peritoneal dialysis underwent successful surgical parathyroidectomy (intact parathyroid hormone level: 2,328pg/mL; postsurgical: 287-69pg/mL [normal: 8.5-72.5]). His postoperative course was complicated by severe and recurrent hypocalcemia as outpatient and he needed repeated admissions for intravenous Ca gluconate. Initially, severe hypocalcemia (corrected Ca: 4.8-5.6mg/dL; nadir ionized Ca: 0.57-0.69mmol/L) was attributed solely to medical noncompliance with oral Ca carbonate (3750mg, 3×/day between meals) and calcitriol (2-4mcg/day). Recognizing coexisting treatment with proton-pump inhibitor, oral Ca supplement was changed to calcium citrate (2,850mg, 3×/day) with prompt resolution of hypocalcemia (corrected Ca: 8.1-8.3mg/dL). This current case and the included literature review emphasize the disproportionate effectiveness of Ca citrate in subjects with achlorhydria.

Authors
Sabahat Afshan, Abdeen Farah Musa, Vonda Echols, Anna Lerant, Tibor Fülöp