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Janet McIlroy a Department of Clinical
Biochemistry, Macewen Building, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, Glasgow. G4
0SF, b University Department of
Medicine, Glasgow Royal Infirmary
Correspondence to: J McIlroy JMcIlroy{at}gri-biochem.org.uk
Permanent hypoparathyroidism occurs in 0.2%-0.3% of
patients who undergo thyroid surgery1; it arises less
frequently as an inherited or as an autoimmune disease. The condition
is treated with vitamin D analogue drugs, doses of which have to be
titrated against the serum calcium concentration while avoiding
hypercalciuria. The vitamin D requirements in women with
hypoparathyroidism can change if their oestrogen status alters. An
awareness of this can avoid hypercalcaemia.
Case 1
Case 2
Case 3
These three cases show that a change in oestrogen status can
alter sensitivity to a potent vitamin D analogue in women who do not
have the ability to produce parathyroid hormone. In a similar case,
reported in 1979, a patient became hypercalcaemic after stopping the
oral contraceptive pill.
2 3
Reintroduction of oestrogen
was associated with a fall in her serum calcium concentration. The
anti-oestrogenic activity of danazol Oestrogen, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, and parathyroid hormone influence
bone metabolism. Cytokines are now recognised as pivotal mediators of
oestrogen, which acts on oestrogen receptors on
osteoblasts7 and osteoclasts8 to inhibit bone
resorption.9 In normal women, oestrogen withdrawal
increases bone resorption and causes a rise in serum calcium.
1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D is now known to be the major direct regulator
of active transcellular calcium absorption via vitamin D receptors in
intestinal mucosal cells.10 Oestrogen can increase calcium
absorption directly and indirectly by stimulating 1-
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Case reports
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Case reports
Comment
References
A 54 year old woman had undergone thyroidectomy for Graves'
disease 34 years previously and had been treated with vitamin D since
that time. She had remained euthyroid, and her serum calcium
concentration had been satisfactory and stable for several years on
1-
hydroxycholecalciferol treatment (1 µg/day). The patient's
parathyroid hormone concentration was below the level of detection,
although her calcitonin concentration was measurable (32 ng/l,
reference range <45 ng/l). Two months after stopping hormone
replacement therapy she developed symptoms of hypercalcaemia
anorexia,
nausea, abdominal pain, constipation, and weight loss of 9 kg.
Hypercalcaemia was confirmed biochemically; her calcium concentration,
adjusted for albumin, was 3.5 mmol/l. Her dose of 1-
hydroxycholecalciferol, calcium intake, and compliance with treatment
were unchanged. She had been on hormone replacement therapy for 8 years
a cyclical regimen had been prescribed initially, and thereafter
a continuous combined preparation. After 1-
hydroxycholecalciferol was stopped, her calcium concentration returned to normal. Her serum
calcium concentration subsequently remained within the reference range
on a reduced dose of 1-
hydroxycholecalciferol (0.25 µg/day).
A 52 year old woman with idiopathic hypoparathyroidism had been
treated for 30 years with vitamin D analogues. For many years she had
been taking 1-
hydroxycholecalciferol (3 µg/day). At annual review
she was hypercalcaemic (calcium concentration adjusted for albumin, 3.1 mmol/l) and had anorexia, nausea, and weight loss of 12 kg. Before this
her serum calcium concentration had consistently been within the
reference range. There had been no change in her calcium intake or in
compliance with treatment. Her calcium concentration returned to normal
values after the dosage of 1-
hydroxycholecalciferol was reduced to
1 µg on alternate days. Further inquiry showed that her last
menstrual period had been 3 months before the discovery of
hypercalcaemia, and her postmenopausal status was confirmed by the
finding of raised gonadotrophin concentrations (follicle stimulating
hormone 93 U/l, luteinising hormone 109 U/l).
A 51 year old woman had been treated with vitamin D analogues and
thyroxine supplements for 13 years since developing persistent
hypoparathyroidism and hypothyroidism after subtotal thyroidectomy for
Graves' disease. Her serum calcium concentrations had been within the
reference range until October 1988, when she presented with a 6 month
history of weight loss of 9 kg, nausea, vomiting, thirst, and
intermittent confusion. She was also menopausal. There had been no
change in her dose of 1-
hydroxycholecalciferol (2 µg/day),
calcium intake, or compliance with treatment. Hypercalcaemia was
confirmed (the calcium concentration, adjusted for albumin, was 3.25 mmol/l). Her calcium concentration returned to normal and her symptoms
resolved after intravenous rehydration treatment and an interval
without vitamin D therapy. Treatment with 1-
hydroxycholecalciferol
was reintroduced at a reduced daily dose of 0.25 µg, and the
patient's calcium concentrations remained within the reference range thereafter.
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Comment
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Case reports
Comment
References
prescribed for endometriosis in a
patient with idiopathic hypoparathyroidism who was being treated with
1-
hydroxycholecalciferol
resulted in hypercalcaemia and a reduced
maintenance requirement for 1-
hydroxycholecalciferol.4 Hypercalcaemia can also occur immediately after delivery in women with
hypoparathyroidism treated with vitamin D supplements.
5 6
All these observations support a crucial role for oestrogen in calcium
regulation in these women.
hydroxylase activity in the kidney.11 Withdrawal of oestrogens would theoretically reduce calcium absorption, and hypercalcaemia in these cases cannot be explained by this mechanism. Ultimately, the effects of oestrogen on bone and calcium metabolism are monitored by the calcium sensing receptor on parathyroid cells,12 which respond by altering parathyroid hormone
secretion. Parathyroid hormone is a major modulator of osteoclast
activity. In the absence of parathyroid hormone, the positive effect on osteoclast activity and bone resorption of withdrawal of oestrogen becomes much more important for calcium regulation. In the absence of
parathyroid hormone, the balance between the action of
1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, which is a potent inducer of bone
resorption,13 and of oestrogen, which inhibits bone
resorption, may become more crucial. A clinical awareness of this
phenomenon allows appropriate monitoring of patients and adjustment of
their dose of vitamin D at the menopause or while starting or stopping
hormone replacement therapy.
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Acknowledgments |
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Contributors: JM, RD and AA collected cases. JM, FD and JH wrote the manuscript and are guarantors for the paper.
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References |
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| 1. | Gann DS, Paone JF. Delayed hypocalcemia after thyroidectomy for Graves' disease is prevented by parathyroid autotransplanation. Ann Surg 1979; 190: 508-513[Medline]. |
| 2. | Verbeelen D, Fuss M. Hypercalcaemia induced by oestrogen withdrawal in vitamin D-treated hypoparathyroidism. BMJ 1979; i: 522-523. |
| 3. | Nagant de Deuxchaisnes C. Oestrogen-induced hypocalcaemia in hypoparathyroidism. BMJ 1979; i: 1563. |
| 4. | Hepburn NC, Abdul-Aziz LAS, Whiteoak R. Danazol-induced hypercalcaemia in alphacalcidol-treated hypoparathyoidism. Postgrad Med J 1989; 65: 849-850[Abstract]. |
| 5. | Cundy T, Haining SA, Guilland-Cumming DF, Butler J, Kanis JA. Remission of hypoparathyroidism during lactation: evidence for a physiological role for prolactin in the regulation of vitamin D metabolism. Clin Endocrinol 1987; 26: 667-674[Medline]. |
| 6. | Wright AD, Joplin GF, Dixon HG. Postpartum hypercalcaemia in treated hypoparathyroidism. BMJ 1969; i: 23-25. |
| 7. |
Eriksen EF, Colvard DS, Berg NJ, Graham ML, Mann KG, Spelsberg TC, et al.
Evidence of oestrogen receptors on normal human osteoblast-like cells.
Science
1988;
241:
84-86 |
| 8. | Oursler MJ, Pederson L, Pyfferoen J, Osdoby P, Fitzpatrick L, Spelsberg TC. Oestrogen modulation of avian osteoclast lysosomal gene expression. Endocrinology 1993; 132: 1373-1380[Abstract]. |
| 9. |
Manolagas SC, Jilka RL.
Bone marrow cytokines and bone remodelling. Emerging insights into the pathophysiology of osteoporosis.
N Engl J Med
1995;
332:
305-311 |
| 10. | Reichel H, Koeffler HP, Norman AW. Role of vitamin D endocrine system in health and disease. N Engl J Med 1989; 320: 980[Medline]. |
| 11. | Gennari C, Agnusdei D, Nardi P, Givirelli R. Estrogen preserves a normal intestinal responsiveness to 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 in oophorectomized women J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1990; 71: 1288-1293[Abstract]. |
| 12. | Brown EM, Gamba G, Riccardi D, Lambardi M, Butters R, Kifor O, et al. Cloning and characterisation of an extracellular calcium sensing receptor from bovine parathyroid. Nature 1993; 366: 575-580[Medline]. |
| 13. | Reynolds JJ, Pavlovitch H, Balsan S. 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol increases bone resorption on thyroparathyroidectomised mice. Calcified Tiss Res 1976; 21: 207-212. |
(Accepted 12 May 1999)
Israeli students are refusing to perform intimate examinations on anaesthetised women without their informed consent.