Abstract

Calcium and magnesium metabolism was investigated in 10 hypertensive subjects with primary aldosteronism (seven adenomatous, three idiopathic). Serum levels of total calcium (9.03 +/- 0.2 mg/dl) and ionized calcium (2.06 +/- 0.06 meq/liter) were in the low-normal range, except for two patients who had levels of serum ionized calcium clearly above normal. Furthermore, both serum total (n = 6, p less than 0.01) and ionized calcium levels (n = 3) rose postoperatively in the patients who had an aldosterone-producing tumor removed. Dramatic elevations of parathyroid hormone levels (mean, 645 +/- 109 pgeq/liter; normal, less than 150 to 375 pgeq/liter) were seen in the majority of patients, including those two with frank ionized calcium elevations. Magnesium levels were within normal limits (2.07 +/- 0.07 meq/liter). These results indicate that parathyroid hypersecretion is a common feature of primary aldosteronism and also suggest a physiologic relationship between the activity of the renin-aldosterone system and parathyroid physiology. Sodium-volume expansion and negative calcium balance induced by aldosterone excess may predispose to hyperparathyroidism.

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