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Hyperparathyroidism

Hyperparathyroidism is often discovered incidentally through routine blood work showing elevated calcium — a finding that should never be ignored. This common endocrine disorder causes calcium to leach from bones, accumulate in blood, and deposit in kidneys, leading to osteoporosis, kidney stones, and numerous other complications. Early detection enables treatment that prevents these consequences.

Calcium is one of the most tightly regulated substances in the human body. It’s essential for bone strength, muscle contraction, nerve signaling, blood clotting, and countless cellular processes. The body maintains blood calcium within a remarkably narrow range — even small deviations can cause serious problems. This precise regulation is controlled primarily by the parathyroid glands, four tiny structures nestled behind the thyroid gland in the neck.

In hyperparathyroidism, one or more parathyroid glands become overactive, producing excessive parathyroid hormone (PTH). This hormone’s primary job is to raise blood calcium levels — and when produced in excess, it does exactly that, but at a cost. PTH pulls calcium from bones, increases calcium absorption from the gut, and reduces calcium excretion by the kidneys. The result is elevated blood calcium (hypercalcemia) accompanied by progressive bone loss, kidney damage, and a constellation of symptoms affecting nearly every organ system.

Primary hyperparathyroidism is surprisingly common, affecting approximately 1 in 500 to 1 in 1,000 adults. It’s the third most common endocrine disorder after diabetes and thyroid disease. Most cases today are discovered incidentally — a routine metabolic panel shows elevated calcium, prompting further investigation that reveals the underlying parathyroid problem. This is actually good news: it means the condition is often caught before severe complications develop.

The classic teaching about hyperparathyroidism describes “bones, stones, abdominal groans, and psychic moans” — referring to osteoporosis, kidney stones, gastrointestinal symptoms, and neuropsychiatric manifestations. While this memorable phrase captures the range of potential complications, many patients today present with milder, less dramatic symptoms or are entirely asymptomatic at diagnosis. However, “asymptomatic” doesn’t mean “harmless” — even without obvious symptoms, the disease may be silently weakening bones and damaging kidneys.

From a prevention perspective, hyperparathyroidism is highly significant. Routine calcium measurement on basic metabolic panels enables early detection. When diagnosed before complications occur, treatment (usually surgical removal of the abnormal parathyroid gland) is curative in over 95% of cases. Even in those who don’t undergo surgery, monitoring and medical management can prevent or slow progression. The key is recognizing elevated calcium as a warning sign that deserves investigation, not dismissal.

This guide provides a comprehensive overview of hyperparathyroidism — from the physiology of calcium regulation to the causes of parathyroid overactivity, from recognizing symptoms to interpreting blood tests, and from treatment options to long-term outcomes. Understanding this condition empowers you to take action when elevated calcium appears on your lab results.

Quick Summary:


Understanding Calcium Regulation

The Parathyroid Glands

Despite their name, the parathyroid glands have nothing to do with thyroid function — they just happen to be located near the thyroid. Most people have four parathyroid glands, each about the size of a grain of rice, located on the back surface of the thyroid gland. Some people have fewer or more glands, and the location can vary.

The parathyroid glands have one job: produce parathyroid hormone (PTH) in response to low blood calcium. When calcium levels drop even slightly, the parathyroid glands sense this and release PTH to bring calcium back up. When calcium levels are adequate, PTH secretion decreases. This feedback loop normally maintains calcium within a very narrow range.

How PTH Raises Calcium

PTH raises blood calcium through three main mechanisms:

1. Bone resorption: PTH stimulates osteoclasts (bone-resorbing cells) to break down bone and release calcium and phosphorus into the blood. This is the fastest way to raise calcium but comes at the cost of bone loss if sustained.

2. Kidney effects: PTH acts on the kidneys to:

3. Intestinal absorption: Through its effect on vitamin D activation, PTH indirectly increases calcium absorption from the gut.

The Role of Vitamin D

Vitamin D works closely with PTH in calcium regulation. Active vitamin D (calcitriol) increases calcium absorption from the intestines — this is its primary role in calcium homeostasis. PTH stimulates the kidney enzyme that converts inactive vitamin D to active vitamin D. This PTH-vitamin D interaction means that vitamin D deficiency can contribute to parathyroid problems, and vitamin D status is always assessed when evaluating calcium disorders.

Normal vs. Abnormal Calcium Regulation

ScenarioCalciumPTH ResponseOutcome
Normal regulationLowIncreases appropriatelyCalcium normalizes
Normal regulationHighDecreases (suppressed)Calcium normalizes
Primary hyperparathyroidismHighElevated or inappropriately normalCalcium stays high
Secondary hyperparathyroidismLow or normalElevated (appropriate response)Trying to raise calcium

The key diagnostic insight: in primary hyperparathyroidism, PTH is elevated when it should be suppressed. The parathyroid gland is ignoring the feedback signal from high calcium and continuing to produce PTH autonomously.


Types of Hyperparathyroidism

Primary Hyperparathyroidism

Primary hyperparathyroidism occurs when one or more parathyroid glands develop a problem that causes autonomous, unregulated PTH production. The gland produces PTH regardless of blood calcium levels, breaking the normal feedback loop.

Causes of primary hyperparathyroidism:

Single parathyroid adenoma (80-85% of cases): A benign tumor develops in one parathyroid gland, producing excess PTH. The other three glands are normal (and often suppressed). Surgical removal of the adenoma is curative.

Parathyroid hyperplasia (10-15% of cases): All four parathyroid glands become enlarged and overactive. This can occur sporadically or as part of genetic syndromes (MEN1, MEN2A). Treatment usually involves removing 3.5 glands (subtotal parathyroidectomy) or all four glands with reimplantation of a small piece.

Parathyroid carcinoma (<1% of cases): Rare but important to recognize. Usually causes more severe hypercalcemia. Treatment requires complete surgical excision; may recur.

Multiple adenomas (2-5% of cases): Two or more adenomas in different glands.

Secondary Hyperparathyroidism

Secondary hyperparathyroidism is a physiologically appropriate response to low calcium or vitamin D deficiency. The parathyroid glands are working correctly — they’re responding to a signal indicating more PTH is needed. The problem lies elsewhere.

Common causes:

Chronic kidney disease: The most common cause. Failing kidneys cannot activate vitamin D or excrete phosphorus, leading to low calcium and high phosphorus. PTH rises in response. This is nearly universal in advanced CKD and contributes to bone disease (renal osteodystrophy).

Vitamin D deficiency: Without adequate vitamin D, calcium absorption from the gut is impaired. PTH rises to maintain calcium through bone resorption — a compensatory mechanism that works in the short term but causes bone loss if sustained.

Calcium deficiency: Inadequate dietary calcium (rare as a sole cause in developed countries).

Malabsorption: Conditions that impair calcium or vitamin D absorption (celiac disease, gastric bypass surgery, inflammatory bowel disease).

In secondary hyperparathyroidism, calcium is typically low or normal (not elevated), and the treatment is addressing the underlying cause (treating kidney disease, repleting vitamin D).

Tertiary Hyperparathyroidism

Tertiary hyperparathyroidism occurs when long-standing secondary hyperparathyroidism leads to autonomous parathyroid function. After years of stimulation (usually in chronic kidney disease), the parathyroid glands become hyperplastic and begin producing PTH independently, even after the original stimulus is corrected (such as after kidney transplantation). Calcium becomes elevated. Treatment may require surgery.

Normocalcemic Primary Hyperparathyroidism

A recognized variant where PTH is persistently elevated but calcium remains in the normal range (after excluding secondary causes). This may represent early primary hyperparathyroidism before calcium rises, or a distinct entity. Important considerations:

Genetic and Familial Forms

While most primary hyperparathyroidism is sporadic, several genetic syndromes include hyperparathyroidism:

Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Type 1 (MEN1):

Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Type 2A (MEN2A):

Familial Hypocalciuric Hypercalcemia (FHH):

When to suspect a genetic syndrome:


Who Gets Primary Hyperparathyroidism?

Epidemiology

Primary hyperparathyroidism is common:

Risk Factors

Sex: Women are 2-3 times more likely to develop primary hyperparathyroidism than men. The reason isn’t entirely clear but may relate to hormonal factors.

Age: Risk increases with age, particularly after age 50. The condition is uncommon in young adults (and when it occurs in younger patients, genetic syndromes should be considered).

Radiation exposure: Head and neck radiation (for childhood cancers or other conditions) increases parathyroid adenoma risk decades later.

Lithium use: Long-term lithium therapy (for bipolar disorder) increases the risk of both hyperparathyroidism and hypercalcemia.

Genetic syndromes:

Family history: Having a first-degree relative with primary hyperparathyroidism increases risk, even without a known genetic syndrome.


Symptoms and Clinical Features

The clinical presentation of hyperparathyroidism has evolved dramatically. In the past, patients presented with severe complications — dramatic bone disease, multiple kidney stones, profound muscle weakness. Today, most cases are discovered incidentally through routine blood work, often in patients with few or no obvious symptoms.

The Classic Description: “Bones, Stones, Abdominal Groans, and Psychic Moans”

This memorable phrase captures the range of potential manifestations:

Bones: Skeletal Effects

Stones: Kidney Manifestations

Abdominal Groans: Gastrointestinal Symptoms

Psychic Moans: Neuropsychiatric Manifestations

The “Asymptomatic” Patient

Many patients discovered through routine blood work report no symptoms — or so they think. This phenomenon deserves careful consideration:

Symptoms by Calcium Level

The severity of symptoms often correlates with the degree of hypercalcemia:

Mild hypercalcemia (slightly above normal):

Moderate hypercalcemia:

Severe hypercalcemia (hypercalcemic crisis):

Severe hypercalcemia is more commonly associated with malignancy than with primary hyperparathyroidism, but parathyroid carcinoma and parathyroid crisis can cause extreme calcium elevations.

Cardiovascular Effects

Hyperparathyroidism has been associated with cardiovascular abnormalities:

Whether parathyroidectomy improves cardiovascular outcomes remains under study.


Effects on Blood Work

Laboratory testing is central to diagnosing and managing hyperparathyroidism. Understanding the expected patterns helps with interpretation.

Calcium

Serum calcium: Elevated in primary hyperparathyroidism. This is typically the first abnormality detected. Calcium may be persistently elevated or intermittently elevated early in the disease.

Ionized calcium: The biologically active form (not bound to proteins). More accurate than total calcium, especially when protein levels are abnormal. Elevated in hyperparathyroidism.

Albumin-corrected calcium: Total calcium should be corrected for albumin levels — low albumin can make total calcium appear falsely normal when ionized calcium is actually elevated.

Parathyroid Hormone (PTH)

The key diagnostic test. In primary hyperparathyroidism:

The critical insight: Finding elevated calcium with elevated or non-suppressed PTH is the biochemical diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism. Other causes of high calcium (malignancy, vitamin D toxicity, etc.) suppress PTH.

Phosphorus

Typically low or low-normal in primary hyperparathyroidism. PTH increases kidney phosphorus excretion. This helps distinguish from other causes of hypercalcemia.

Vitamin D

25-hydroxyvitamin D: Should always be measured. Vitamin D deficiency is common and can coexist with or mask primary hyperparathyroidism. Deficiency should be corrected (which may unmask or worsen hypercalcemia).

1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (calcitriol): The active form. Often elevated in primary hyperparathyroidism (PTH stimulates its production). Not routinely measured but can be helpful in complex cases.

24-Hour Urine Calcium

Essential to distinguish primary hyperparathyroidism from familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia (FHH):

This distinction is critical because FHH is benign and does not require surgery, while primary hyperparathyroidism often does.

Kidney Function

Creatinine and GFR should be assessed. Elevated creatinine may indicate kidney damage from hypercalcemia or stones.

Bone Turnover Markers

May be elevated, reflecting increased bone resorption. Not routinely needed for diagnosis but sometimes helpful.

Diagnostic Pattern Summary

TestPrimary HyperparathyroidismSecondary HyperparathyroidismMalignancy-Related Hypercalcemia
CalciumElevatedLow or normalElevated (often markedly)
PTHElevated or inappropriately normalElevated (appropriate)Suppressed (low)
PhosphorusLow or low-normalHigh (in CKD)Variable
Vitamin DVariable; calcitriol often highOften low (causative)Variable

Diagnosis

When to Suspect Hyperparathyroidism

Consider testing for hyperparathyroidism when:

Diagnostic Workup

Step 1 — Confirm hypercalcemia: Repeat calcium measurement (at least twice) to confirm it’s persistently elevated, not a lab error or transient finding. Check albumin or obtain ionized calcium.

Step 2 — Measure PTH: This is the key test. Elevated or inappropriately normal PTH with high calcium = primary hyperparathyroidism.

Step 3 — Measure vitamin D: 25-hydroxyvitamin D to assess vitamin D status.

Step 4 — 24-hour urine calcium: To rule out FHH and assess kidney calcium handling.

Step 5 — Assess for complications:

Localization Studies

Once primary hyperparathyroidism is biochemically diagnosed, imaging helps locate the abnormal gland(s) before surgery. This is crucial for planning minimally invasive surgery.

Sestamibi scan (parathyroid scintigraphy):

Neck ultrasound:

4D-CT scan:

MRI:

Combination approach: Many centers use concordant imaging (sestamibi + ultrasound). When both studies identify the same gland, accuracy is very high. Discordant or negative results may prompt additional imaging or bilateral exploration.

Important principle: Localization studies are for surgical planning, NOT for diagnosis. A negative imaging study does not rule out hyperparathyroidism if the biochemistry is diagnostic. Surgery can still be performed with bilateral exploration. The diagnosis is biochemical; imaging just guides the surgical approach.

Differential Diagnosis of Hypercalcemia

Not all elevated calcium is hyperparathyroidism. Other causes must be considered:

Malignancy:

Vitamin D toxicity:

Granulomatous diseases:

Thiazide diuretics:

Immobilization:

Milk-alkite syndrome:


Treatment

Treatment decisions in primary hyperparathyroidism depend on whether the patient has symptoms, complications, or meets criteria for intervention. The good news is that treatment is highly effective.

Surgery: Parathyroidectomy

Surgical removal of the abnormal parathyroid gland(s) is the only cure for primary hyperparathyroidism. In experienced hands, it is highly successful and safe.

Success rate: >95% cure rate when performed by experienced parathyroid surgeons. Surgeon experience matters significantly — outcomes are better at high-volume centers.

Types of surgery:

Intraoperative PTH monitoring: A valuable adjunct to surgery. PTH levels are measured during the operation — before and after gland removal. Because PTH has a short half-life (about 4 minutes), levels drop rapidly after successful removal. A significant drop (typically >50%) confirms that the source of excess PTH has been removed. This helps ensure surgical success and can allow a more limited operation.

Potential complications of surgery:

Indications for surgery — current guidelines recommend surgery for patients with:

Surgery for asymptomatic patients: Even patients without clear symptoms may benefit from surgery. Multiple studies show improvements in bone density, quality of life, and possibly cognitive function after parathyroidectomy. The improvement in quality of life is often striking, suggesting that many “asymptomatic” patients actually had subtle symptoms they weren’t aware of. Given the high success rate and low complication rate in experienced hands, many experts now recommend surgery for most patients who are reasonable surgical candidates, rather than waiting for complications to develop.

Monitoring Without Surgery (Observation)

For patients who don’t meet surgical criteria or prefer not to have surgery, active monitoring is appropriate:

Monitoring protocol typically includes:

If monitoring reveals progression (worsening calcium, declining bone density, new stones, reduced kidney function), surgery should be reconsidered.

Medical Management

Medications don’t cure hyperparathyroidism but can manage specific aspects:

Cinacalcet (calcimimetic): Reduces PTH secretion by making the parathyroid glands more sensitive to calcium. Can lower calcium levels but doesn’t improve bone density. Used in patients who cannot have surgery or as a bridge.

Bisphosphonates: Can improve bone density but don’t address the underlying hyperparathyroidism. May be used in patients with osteoporosis who can’t have surgery.

Denosumab: Another bone-protective option.

Vitamin D supplementation: If deficient, vitamin D should be repleted. This may transiently worsen hypercalcemia but is generally safe and appropriate.

Lifestyle Recommendations


Living with Hyperparathyroidism

After Parathyroidectomy

For most patients, successful surgery is curative and transformative:

Immediate changes:

Longer-term improvements:

Post-operative considerations:

Summary of Outcomes After Successful Surgery

OutcomeExpected Result
Calcium normalization>95% cure rate
Bone density improvementSignificant gains over 1-2 years
Kidney stone recurrenceMarked reduction
Fatigue/energyOften dramatic improvement
Cognitive functionFrequently improves
Quality of lifeSignificant improvement in most patients

Long-Term Monitoring (If Not Having Surgery)

Patients managed without surgery need ongoing surveillance:

Prognosis

The prognosis for primary hyperparathyroidism is excellent with appropriate management:


Secondary Hyperparathyroidism

Secondary hyperparathyroidism deserves separate consideration as it’s fundamentally different from primary disease.

In Chronic Kidney Disease

This is the most common form of secondary hyperparathyroidism. As kidney function declines:

This “CKD-mineral and bone disorder” (CKD-MBD) contributes to bone disease, vascular calcification, and cardiovascular risk. Management involves phosphorus control (diet, phosphate binders), vitamin D supplementation, and sometimes calcimimetics.

In Vitamin D Deficiency

Severe vitamin D deficiency impairs calcium absorption, leading to compensatory PTH elevation. Treatment is simple: vitamin D repletion. PTH typically normalizes as vitamin D is corrected.

Post-Bariatric Surgery

Gastric bypass and other procedures can impair calcium and vitamin D absorption, leading to secondary hyperparathyroidism. Lifelong supplementation and monitoring are required.


Special Considerations

Hyperparathyroidism During Pregnancy

Hyperparathyroidism during pregnancy poses risks to both mother and fetus:

Hyperparathyroidism in the Elderly

Special considerations in older patients:

Parathyroid Carcinoma

Though rare (<1% of primary hyperparathyroidism), parathyroid carcinoma is important to recognize:


Prevention and Early Detection

The Value of Routine Calcium Screening

Most cases of primary hyperparathyroidism today are discovered incidentally through routine blood work. This is valuable:

Don’t Ignore Elevated Calcium

An elevated calcium should never be dismissed without explanation. Even mildly elevated calcium warrants investigation:

The mindset that “it’s just a little high” delays diagnosis and allows preventable complications.

Family Screening

First-degree relatives of patients with primary hyperparathyroidism should be aware of their increased risk. Periodic calcium screening is reasonable, and genetic testing may be appropriate if a hereditary syndrome is suspected.


Key Takeaways

Hyperparathyroidism is a common, treatable condition where early detection through routine calcium testing enables intervention before serious complications develop. The key messages:

If you have elevated calcium on blood work, ask your healthcare provider about checking your PTH level. Early diagnosis and treatment of hyperparathyroidism prevents complications and often dramatically improves quality of life.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is hyperparathyroidism serious?

It can be. Untreated hyperparathyroidism leads to osteoporosis, fractures, kidney stones, and kidney damage. However, when detected early and treated appropriately (usually with surgery), outcomes are excellent and complications can be prevented.

Do I need surgery if I don’t have symptoms?

Many experts now recommend surgery for most patients, even those without obvious symptoms. “Asymptomatic” patients often feel better after surgery (suggesting they had subtle symptoms), and surgery prevents future complications. However, monitoring without surgery is reasonable for some patients who prefer to avoid surgery and don’t meet clear criteria.

What if I have vitamin D deficiency too?

Vitamin D deficiency often coexists with hyperparathyroidism and should be corrected. Repletion may temporarily raise calcium further, but it’s generally safe and necessary. Your doctor will monitor calcium levels during repletion.

Will my bones recover after surgery?

Yes. Bone density typically improves significantly in the 1-2 years following successful parathyroidectomy. Some patients experience dramatic improvements.

Can hyperparathyroidism come back after surgery?

Recurrence is uncommon (<5%) after successful surgery. However, it can occur, so some follow-up monitoring is appropriate.

What causes parathyroid adenomas?

In most cases, the cause is unknown. Some are associated with prior radiation exposure or genetic syndromes. Most appear to arise sporadically.

Is parathyroid disease related to thyroid disease?

Despite their proximity, the parathyroid and thyroid glands are separate structures with different functions. Having one condition doesn’t cause the other. However, they can coexist, and parathyroid surgery requires care to protect the thyroid and its blood supply.

How long does parathyroid surgery take?

Minimally invasive surgery for a localized adenoma may take 30-60 minutes. More extensive exploration takes longer. Most patients go home the same day or the next day.

Can I manage hyperparathyroidism with diet?

Diet alone cannot cure hyperparathyroidism. Maintaining adequate hydration and moderate calcium intake is sensible, but the fundamental problem (an abnormal parathyroid gland) requires surgery to correct.

What’s the difference between parathyroid and thyroid problems?

The thyroid gland regulates metabolism through thyroid hormones. The parathyroid glands regulate calcium through parathyroid hormone. They are separate glands with separate functions. Hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid) is completely different from hyperparathyroidism (overactive parathyroid).

References

This article provides comprehensive educational information about Hyperparathyroidism based on current clinical guidelines and peer-reviewed research. It does not replace personalized medical advice. Consult qualified healthcare professionals for diagnosis and treatment decisions specific to your situation.

Key Sources:

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