Abstract

Abstract Parathyroid crisis is a rare and life-threatening manifestation of hyperparathyroidism. Patients present with severe hypercalcemia and associated symptoms of bone disease, nephrolithiasis, abdominal pain, and fatigue. Multi-organ dysfunction in the form of encephalopathy, cardiac dysrhythmias, and renal failure is often present. There have also been reports of bleeding duodenal ulcers secondary to marked elevated parathyroid hormone. The most common etiology is a single parathyroid adenoma (85%) followed by hyperplasia (10%), double adenomas (4%), and carcinoma (1%). Parathyroid crisis requires immediate medical management of hypercalcemia and in recalcitrant cases, urgent parathyroidectomy. A 67-year-old female presented to the hospital with weakness and intermittent hematochezia. She was found to have acute renal failure, new onset anemia, and profound hypercalcemia of 17.1 mg/dl. On exam, she was slow to respond and exhibited diffuse muscle weakness. EKG showed sinus tachycardia, a right bundle branch block, and normal QTc. She received aggressive intravenous fluids and calcitonin. Bisphosphonate was not given due to renal failure. Due to refractory hypercalcemia, she was initiated on cinacalcet. She ultimately required hemodialysis due to failure of medical therapy. Further work-up showed a PTH of 2627 pg/ml. Vitamin D levels, TSH, and serum and urine protein electrophoresis were unremarkable. Renal ultrasound did not show nephrolithiasis. Given hematochezia and anemia in the setting of parathyroid crisis, endoscopy was done and was unrevealing of ulcers. A parathyroid ultrasound and nuclear medicine CT scan showed bilateral parathyroid adenomas. She underwent left superior and right inferior parathyroidectomy with biopsies revealing hypercellular parathyroid tissue with no features of malignancy. Following surgery, calcium levels gradually normalized. However, she remained dialysis dependent. This case exhibits a rare presentation of parathyroid crisis from double adenomas, requiring urgent double parathyroidectomy due to refractory hypercalcemia. This patient had an astoundingly elevated PTH level of 2627 pg/dl, one of the highest values documented in literature, which may attribute to the recalcitrant nature of hypercalcemia. Prompt diagnosis and treatment of parathyroid crisis is critical in preventing life-threatening complications. Presentation: No date and time listed

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