Abstract
To investigate the occurrence of arrhythmias in patients with normocalcemic (NC) primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) compared to both hypercalcemic PHPT patients and control subjects by means of 24-h Holter ECG. Thirteen NCPHPT postmenopausal patients were enrolled and age-matched with 13 hypercalcemic PHPT patients and 13 controls. Every subject underwent basal ECG, 24-h Holter ECG and mineral metabolism biochemical evaluation. PHPT patients had higher mean serum calcium levels compared to both NCPHPT and controls; there was no difference in mean serum calcium levels between NCPHPT and controls. Both NCPHPT and PHPT patients had significantly higher mean PTH levels compared with controls. There were no differences in ECG parameters between the three groups, except for QTc interval. PHPT patients had normal QTc interval values, but significantly shorter mean values compared with those of controls and NCPHPT patients. During 24-h Holter ECG recording, 100% of PHPT patients had supraventricular premature beats (SVPBs), compared to 46% of NCPHPT (p = 0.005) and to 53% of controls (p = 0.01). PHPT patients experienced ventricular premature beats (VPBs) (69.2%) vs 15% of NCPHPT patients (p = 0.01) and 23% of controls (p = 0.04). There was no difference between NCPHPT and controls subjects concerning occurrence of both VPBs and SVPBs. NCPHPT patients did not experience an increased occurrence of arrhythmias compared to controls, while PHPT patients showed an increased occurrence compared to both controls and NCPHPT. Our findings are most probably related to the short QTc interval caused by hypercalcemia observed in PHPT patients, but not in NCPHPT.
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