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Multifactorial hypercalcemia and literature review on primary hyperparathyroidism associated with lymphoma.
[familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia]
The
most
common
cause
of
hypercalcemia
in
hospitalized
patients
is
malignancy
.
Primary
hyperparathyroidism
most
commonly
causes
hypercalcemia
in
the
outpatient
setting
.
These
two
account
for
over
90
%
of
all
cases
of
hypercalcemia
.
Hypercalcemia
can
be
divided
into
PTH
-mediated
and
PTH
-independent
variants
.
Primary
hyperparathyroidism
,
familial
hypocalciuric
hypercalcemia
,
familial
hyperparathyroidism
,
and
secondary
hyperparathyroidism
are
PTH
mediated
.
The
most
common
PTH
-independent
type
of
hypercalcemia
is
malignancy
related
.
Several
mechanisms
lead
to
hypercalcemia
in
malignancy-direct
osteolysis
by
metastatic
disease
or
,
more
commonly
,
production
of
humoral
factors
by
the
primary
tumor
also
known
as
humoral
hypercalcemia
of
malignancy
that
accounts
for
about
80
%
of
malignancy-related
hypercalcemia
.
The
majority
of
HHM
is
caused
by
tumor
-produced
parathyroid
hormone
-related
protein
and
less
frequently
production
of
1
,
25
-
dihydroxyvitamin
D
or
parathyroid
hormone
by
the
tumor
.
We
report
the
rare
case
of
a
patient
with
hypercalcemia
and
diagnosed
primary
hyperparathyroidism
.
The
patient
had
persistent
hypercalcemia
after
surgical
removal
of
parathyroid
adenoma
with
recorded
significant
decrease
in
PTH
level
.
After
continued
investigation
it
was
found
that
the
patient
also
had
elevated
1
,
25
-
dihydroxyvitamin
D
and
further
studies
confirmed
a
large
spleen
mass
that
was
later
confirmed
to
be
a
lymphoma
.
This
is
a
rare
example
of
two
concomitant
causes
of
hypercalcemia
requiring
therapy
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"diagnosed primary hyperparathyroidism"
symptom
familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia
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