Literature DB >> 27081654

Transient Hypocalcemia in a Dialysis Patient With Paget's disease and Presumed Renal Cell Carcinoma.

Kenneth R Phelps1, Jay Mo2, Chrystina Czerwinskyj1, Roy O Mathew1.   

Abstract

A 68-year-old man with end-stage renal disease was hospitalized because of radicular pain and weakness in the left arm and hand. Sonography and computed tomography had recently shown a large right renal mass. On admission, magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated vertebral metastases with epidural extension, and radiotherapy was directed to the spine and kidney. Hypocalcemia was first noted on the fourth hospital day. A second computed tomography scan showed bleeding into and around the kidney, and arterial embolization was required to halt the bleeding. Hypocalcemia persisted for at least 27 days at values between 6.0 and 7.7 mg/dL and was consistently associated with ionized calcium concentrations less than or equal to 4.44 mg/dL. After an unrevealing search for a recognized cause, we attributed hypocalcemia to persistent sequestration of calcium in the right retroperitoneum. Exogenous supplementation eventually restored the concentration to normal. In the absence of renal and intestinal loss, hypocalcemia reflects abnormal flux of calcium from the extracellular compartment into tissue. Our patient's repository appears to have been a necrotic and hemorrhagic cancer. Tumor-induced sequestration of calcium should be included in the differential diagnosis of hypocalcemia.

Entities:  

Keywords:  chronic kidney disease; hemodialysis; hypocalcemia; kidney cancer

Year:  2016        PMID: 27081654      PMCID: PMC4814942          DOI: 10.1177/2324709616640818

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Investig Med High Impact Case Rep        ISSN: 2324-7096


Introduction

In hemodialysis patients, hypocalcemia has been reported as a complication of extreme hyperphosphatemia, low dialysate calcium, abrupt reduction in the parathyroid hormone concentration ([PTH]), antiresporptive therapy with denosumab, and iron chelation with deferasirox.[1-6] This report describes a patient with transient hypocalcemia that could not be attributed to recognized causes. We ultimately concluded that a necrotic renal cancer had provided a temporary repository for extracellular calcium.

Case Report

A 68-year-old man was hospitalized because of radicular left arm pain of 2 weeks duration. Over the previous 14 weeks, the hemoglobin concentration ([hgb]) had fallen from 9.6 g/dL to values as low as 6.6 g/dL; 2 units of red blood cells (RBCs) had been transfused 4 weeks prior to admission. The patient, who was anuric, had experienced a single episode of gross hematuria almost 2 months before admission, but investigation of this complaint had been delayed. Nine days before admission, a renal sonogram had shown an atrophic left kidney and a large complex mass replacing the right kidney. The patient had hypertensive renal disease and had undergone thrice-weekly hemodialysis for 2¾ years. Paget’s disease had been diagnosed approximately 17 years prior to admission; 8 years before admission a bone scan had shown increased activity in the pelvis, thoracic spine, and right humerus. The serum alkaline phosphatase concentration ([AP]s) had subsequently varied between 400 and 1000 units/L. [PTH] had been consistently elevated during the patient’s tenure on dialysis. Excellent control of phosphatemia ([P]s) had been achieved with 2 intestinal phosphate binders. Medicines on admission included calcium acetate 1334 mg and lanthanum carbonate 1000 mg 3 times daily with meals; a multivitamin once daily; folic acid 1 mg daily; metoprolol tartrate 50 mg 3 times daily on nondialysis days; a nutritional supplement 3 times daily; simvastatin 40 mg at bedtime; sodium bicarbonate 650 mg 3 times daily; and ergocalciferol 50 000 units weekly. Cinacalcet had never been prescribed. During each dialysis treatment the patient received heparin, 3000 units at the outset and 1000 units/hour; paricalcitol 5 µg; and sodium ferric gluconate 62.5 mg. He also received darbepoietin 200 µg weekly. Vital signs on admission were temperature 98.7°F, pulse 86/minute, blood pressure 187/89 mm Hg, and respiratory rate 16/minute. Skin, lymph nodes, lungs, and heart were normal. No masses or organomegaly were detected in the abdomen. Grip strength, wrist dorsiflexion, and elbow extension were weak in the left upper extremity, and pinprick sensation was reduced in the left fifth finger. Leg strength was normal; lower extremity reflexes were not hyperactive, and Babinski reflexes and clonus were absent. The patient was not incontinent. Results of a technetium medronate bone scan performed 6 days before admission were compared to findings reported 8 years earlier. Previously described areas of increased activity were present in the right humerus, the sacrum, and the thoracic spine. An area of high uptake in the vertex of the skull had not been evident in the earlier study (Figure 1).
Figure 1.

Technetium99 medronate bone scan.

Images “a” and “b” are anterior and posterior views, respectively. They were obtained 6 days prior to admission, and findings were compared to those described in a report from 2004. Increased uptake in the vertex of the skull was seen in the present study only. Lesions in the right humerus, thoracic vertebrae, and sacrum were described previously.

Technetium99 medronate bone scan. Images “a” and “b” are anterior and posterior views, respectively. They were obtained 6 days prior to admission, and findings were compared to those described in a report from 2004. Increased uptake in the vertex of the skull was seen in the present study only. Lesions in the right humerus, thoracic vertebrae, and sacrum were described previously. On the day prior to admission, computed tomography (CT) of the abdomen confirmed the presence of a large, mixed-density mass in the right kidney (Figure 2a). Cortical thickening and increased trabeculation in multiple ribs, thoracic and lumbar vertebrae, the pelvis, and the left femur were suggestive of Paget’s disease (Figure 2c). Bone lysis and cortical breakthrough in T11 and T12 were attributed to malignancy (Figure 2d). Adenopathy was not seen.
Figure 2.

Computed tomography of the abdomen.

Images “a,” “c,” and “d” are taken from a study performed on the day prior to admission. Image “b,” which approximates the tomogram in image “a,” is taken from a study done on the fourth hospital day. Image “a” shows a large, complex mass in the right kidney (arrow). Image “c” demonstrates skeletal changes of Paget’s disease in the ilia and sacrum (arrows). Image “d” shows bone lysis in the T12 vertebral body and violation of the cortex adjacent to the spinal canal (arrow). In image “b,” blood has accumulated anterior to, within, and posterior to the mass (arrows).

Computed tomography of the abdomen. Images “a,” “c,” and “d” are taken from a study performed on the day prior to admission. Image “b,” which approximates the tomogram in image “a,” is taken from a study done on the fourth hospital day. Image “a” shows a large, complex mass in the right kidney (arrow). Image “c” demonstrates skeletal changes of Paget’s disease in the ilia and sacrum (arrows). Image “d” shows bone lysis in the T12 vertebral body and violation of the cortex adjacent to the spinal canal (arrow). In image “b,” blood has accumulated anterior to, within, and posterior to the mass (arrows). On the day of admission, magnetic resonance imaging of the spine showed an expansile mass involving C7 and T1 with cortical breakthrough, epidural extension, and effacement of the left C7-T1 neural foramen. Cord compression was not evident. At T12, another expansile lesion involved the posterior vertebral body and the right pedicle and extended into the right anterior spinal canal. Widespread marrow signal changes and numerous focal lesions were suggestive of extensive vertebral metastases (Figure 3).
Figure 3.

Magnetic resonance imaging of the cervical and thoracic spine.

Images are taken from a study performed on the day of admission. Image “a” is a left parasagittal view of the cervical spine showing an expansile mass (arrow) in the bodies of C7 and T1 with a high T2 signal. Image “b” is a cross-sectional view of T1 showing encroachment on the vertebral canal by the lesion (arrow). Image “c” shows a similar lesion at T12. Image “d” demonstrates encroachment of this mass on the vertebral canal (arrow).

Magnetic resonance imaging of the cervical and thoracic spine. Images are taken from a study performed on the day of admission. Image “a” is a left parasagittal view of the cervical spine showing an expansile mass (arrow) in the bodies of C7 and T1 with a high T2 signal. Image “b” is a cross-sectional view of T1 showing encroachment on the vertebral canal by the lesion (arrow). Image “c” shows a similar lesion at T12. Image “d” demonstrates encroachment of this mass on the vertebral canal (arrow). After administration of 10 mg intravenously, dexamethasone was prescribed at an oral dose of 4 mg every 6 hours in anticipation of radiotherapy, which was begun on the second hospital day. In total, 32 Gy was delivered over 10 treatments to the metastasis at C7-T1, and 30 Gy to the metastasis at T12 and the renal mass. On admission, [hgb] was 6.2 g/dL. Three units of packed RBCs were administered on the third and fourth hospital days, but [hgb] fell to a nadir of 5.6 g/dL. A second computed tomography scan confirmed the presence of blood within, anterior to, and posterior to the mass (Figure 2b), and the patient was referred for right renal arterial embolization. Three additional units of RBCs were infused over the ensuing 2 days, and administration of heparin during dialysis was discontinued. Transfusions were then withheld for 25 consecutive days. Table 1 shows temporal relationships between laboratory data and therapeutic efforts during a 30-day period commencing on day 1. Figure 4 depicts serum concentrations of total calcium ([Ca]s), ionized calcium ([Ca]i), phosphorus ([P]s), and albumin ([alb]s), and the blood concentration of hemoglobin ([hgb]) over a 60-day period commencing on the same day. Reference ranges are provided in the legend. On day 2, the first day of radiotherapy, [Ca]s, [alb]s, and [P]s, were 8.3 mg/dL, 2.4 g/dL, and 3.2 mg/dL, respectively. On day 4, [Ca]s was 7.1 mg/dL, and over the next 5 days it fell to 6.3 mg/dL, with a commensurate reduction in [Ca]i. Manifestations of hypocalcemia did not appear.
Table 1.

Overview of Hospitalization[a].

Day[b][Ca], mg/dL (8.5-10.2)[alb], g/dL (3.4-4.5)[Ca]i, mg/dL (4.72-5.28)[P], mg/dL (2.5-4.5)[PTH], pg/mL (18.6-87.8)[25D], ng/mL (30-100)AP, U/L (50-136)[hgb], g/dL (13.5-17)Units RBCHDPO Ca, mg/day[c,d]PO 1,25D, µg/day[d]IV Ca, mg/day[e]RT
18.52.52.61956.2x
28.32.43.25.7x
37.146.32xx
4[f]6.1/5.61
53
6x
76.88.2x
86.78.8xx
96.79.2x
106.33.848.6xx
116.53.60673.210.0279
126.73.89.67800.25186
13x7800.25
146.83.849.47800.5x
156.83.728.7x[g]7800.5x
167.24.008.87800.5
17[b]7.24.041468.5x[g]7800.5x
207.74.288.0x[g]7800.5x
288.12.52.9467.551.57.3x15000.5
304.446.82x1500[h]0.5[i]

Abbreviations: Ca, calcium; alb, albumin; Cai, ionized calcium; P, phosphorus; PTH, parathyroid hormone; 25D, 25-hydroxyvitamin D; 1,25D, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (calcitriol); AP, alkaline phosphatase; hgb, hemoglobin; RBC, red blood cells; HD, hemodialysis treatment; RT, radiotherapy treatment. Doses and sites of RT are provided in the text.

Concentrations are in serum. Normal ranges are given in parentheses.

Enumerated from day of admission to hospital. Discharge was on day 17.

Given as calcium carbonate.

Daily administration continued after discharge.

Given as calcium gluconate.

Date of right renal arterial embolization.

Dialysis these days against [Ca] 6.0 mg/dL, and against 5.0 mg/dL on all other days. Dialysis continued on a thrice-weekly schedule after discharge.

Dose still in effect on day 60.

Dose expired on day 46.

Figure 4.

Blood hemoglobin and parameters of mineral metabolism over a 60-day period.

The period commences with the hospital admission described in the text. Radiotherapy was initiated on day 2, and arterial embolization of the right kidney was performed on day 4. The nadir of [Ca]s was reached gradually over 10 days, and was associated with persistent reductions in [Ca]i. [Ca]i was partially restored at day 30. [Ca]s was found to be normal at day 60. Abbreviations: [Ca]s, total serum calcium concentration; [Ca]i, serum ionized calcium concentration; [P]s, serum phosphorus concentration; [alb]s, serum albumin concentration; [hgb], blood hemoglobin concentration. Reference ranges: [Ca]s, 8.5-10.2 mg/dL; [Ca]i, 4.72-5.28 mg/dL; [P]s, 2.5-4.5 mg/dL; [alb]s, 3.4-4.5 g/dL; [hgb], 13.5-17 g/dL.

Overview of Hospitalization[a]. Abbreviations: Ca, calcium; alb, albumin; Cai, ionized calcium; P, phosphorus; PTH, parathyroid hormone; 25D, 25-hydroxyvitamin D; 1,25D, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (calcitriol); AP, alkaline phosphatase; hgb, hemoglobin; RBC, red blood cells; HD, hemodialysis treatment; RT, radiotherapy treatment. Doses and sites of RT are provided in the text. Concentrations are in serum. Normal ranges are given in parentheses. Enumerated from day of admission to hospital. Discharge was on day 17. Given as calcium carbonate. Daily administration continued after discharge. Given as calcium gluconate. Date of right renal arterial embolization. Dialysis these days against [Ca] 6.0 mg/dL, and against 5.0 mg/dL on all other days. Dialysis continued on a thrice-weekly schedule after discharge. Dose still in effect on day 60. Dose expired on day 46. Blood hemoglobin and parameters of mineral metabolism over a 60-day period. The period commences with the hospital admission described in the text. Radiotherapy was initiated on day 2, and arterial embolization of the right kidney was performed on day 4. The nadir of [Ca]s was reached gradually over 10 days, and was associated with persistent reductions in [Ca]i. [Ca]i was partially restored at day 30. [Ca]s was found to be normal at day 60. Abbreviations: [Ca]s, total serum calcium concentration; [Ca]i, serum ionized calcium concentration; [P]s, serum phosphorus concentration; [alb]s, serum albumin concentration; [hgb], blood hemoglobin concentration. Reference ranges: [Ca]s, 8.5-10.2 mg/dL; [Ca]i, 4.72-5.28 mg/dL; [P]s, 2.5-4.5 mg/dL; [alb]s, 3.4-4.5 g/dL; [hgb], 13.5-17 g/dL. Calcium and ergocalciferol were not administered during the first 10 days of hospitalization, and cinacalcet was not provided at any time. Paricalcitol was not given during the periods summarized in Table 1 and Figure 4. Hemodialysis treatments were performed thrice weekly for 4 hours with Asahi Rexeed-18 high-flux polysulfone dialyzers. The dialysate calcium concentration was 5.0 mg/dL on all but 3 occasions; on days 15, 17, and 20 it was 6.0 mg/dL. On day 11, 279 mg of calcium was infused as calcium gluconate; on day 12, an additional 186 mg was infused, and oral calcium carbonate was added with meals in a dose of 650 mg 3 times daily. Calcitriol, 0.25 µg/day, was prescribed on day 11 and increased to 0.25 µg twice daily on day 14. Introduction of these supplements was followed by a gradual rise in [Ca]i; the concentration was 4.04 mg/dL on day 17 (the date of discharge), 4.28 mg/d L on day 20, and 4.44 mg/dL on day 30. Thereafter, for a period of several months, [Ca]s exceeded 8.0 mg/dL while [alb]s remained at or slightly below 3.0 g/dL (Figure 5).
Figure 5.

Parameters of mineral metabolism over a 600-day period.

The period commences approximately 400 days prior to admission. During those 400 days, [Ca]s and [P]s were normal. [AP]s consistently exceeded 600 units/L, but approximated the upper limit of normal during and after hospitalization. [25OHD]s was brought into the normal range before admission. [PTH] was consistently increased to several times the upper limit of normal. Abbreviations: [AP]s, serum alkaline phosphate concentration; [25OHD], serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration; [PTH], serum PTH concentration. Other abbreviations are provided in the legend for Figure 4. Reference ranges are provided in Figure 4 and Table 1.

Parameters of mineral metabolism over a 600-day period. The period commences approximately 400 days prior to admission. During those 400 days, [Ca]s and [P]s were normal. [AP]s consistently exceeded 600 units/L, but approximated the upper limit of normal during and after hospitalization. [25OHD]s was brought into the normal range before admission. [PTH] was consistently increased to several times the upper limit of normal. Abbreviations: [AP]s, serum alkaline phosphate concentration; [25OHD], serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration; [PTH], serum PTH concentration. Other abbreviations are provided in the legend for Figure 4. Reference ranges are provided in Figure 4 and Table 1. Tests to investigate the cause of hypocalcemia were performed between the 3rd and 17th hospital days (Table 2). Serum concentrations of magnesium ([Mg]s), phosphorus ([P]s), urate ([ur]s), and 25-hydroxyvitamin D ([25OHD]) were normal, and concentrations of parathyroid hormone ([PTH]) and N-telopeptide ([NTx]) were markedly elevated. [AP]s was minimally increased. Reference ranges and conditions sought are summarized in Table 2.
Table 2.

Laboratory Investigations to Determine the Cause of Hypocalcemia[a].

TestCondition SoughtHospital DayResultReference Range
[P], mg/dLTumor lysis syndrome123.82.5-4.5
[ur], mg/dLTumor lysis syndrome124.13.9-9.0
[Mg], mg/dLHypomagnesemia152.01.9-2.7
[25OHD], ng/mLVitamin D deficiency346.330.0-100.0
[PTH], pg/mLHypoparathyroidism11673.218.6-87.8
[AP], units/LExcessive bone formation1714650-136
[NTx], BCE/LSuppressed bone resorption17417.75.4-24.2

Abbreviations: P, phosphorus; ur, urate; Mg, magnesium; 25OHD, 25-hydroxyvitamin D; PTH, parathyroid hormone; AP, alkaline phosphatase; NTx, N-telopeptide; BCE, bone collagen equivalents.

All determinations in serum.

Laboratory Investigations to Determine the Cause of Hypocalcemia[a]. Abbreviations: P, phosphorus; ur, urate; Mg, magnesium; 25OHD, 25-hydroxyvitamin D; PTH, parathyroid hormone; AP, alkaline phosphatase; NTx, N-telopeptide; BCE, bone collagen equivalents. All determinations in serum. Figure 5 provides a 600-day temporal perspective. Over approximately 400 days prior to admission, [PTH] was consistently elevated despite normal [P]s and administration of parenteral paricalcitol during dialysis treatments. [25OHD] was robustly normal in response to supplemental ergocalciferol. [Alb]s remained between 3.0 and 3.5 g/dL, but it fell to a nadir of 2.4 g/dL during the period of hypocalcemia. [AP]s was consistently increased until 5 months before admission, but all subsequent values approximated or slightly exceeded the upper limit of normal. The clinical suspicion of metastatic cancer was not confirmed histologically. An earlier iliac crest biopsy had shown no malignant cells, and risks associated with a renal or vertebral biopsy seemed prohibitive. Sunitinib was administered after completion of radiotherapy, but pulmonary and other metastases continued to appear and expand. The patient died in December 2012. An autopsy was not performed.

Discussion

This report describes a transient episode of hypocalcemia in a hemodialysis patient presumed to have renal cell cancer and metastases to bone. Measurements of [Ca]i repeatedly confirmed the hypocalcemia. The abnormality appeared after initiation of radiotherapy to the spine and right kidney and persisted for at least 27 days. It responded minimally to intravenous calcium during days 11 and 12, and gradually but incompletely to dialysis and oral calcium and calcitriol during days 12 to 30. The time required to restore normocalcemia was less than 60 days but is not precisely known. During the first 10 days of hospitalization, we presume that omission of calcium acetate and paricalcitol from the medical regimen reduced intestinal calcium absorption. Simultaneously, however, we suspect that acquisition of calcium during dialysis equaled or exceeded this reduction. Values of [Ca]i on days 10 and 11 imply that dialysate-to-plasma [Ca] gradients had exceeded 1.0 mg/dL during the preceding week. On average, during a 4-hour dialysis treatment, such gradients should have promoted diffusion of at least 400 mg of calcium into plasma as 140 mg was removed by convection, with a net gain to the patient of 260 mg per treatment.[7] Because the patient had no diarrhea and produced no urine, it is unlikely that calcium was lost externally at a comparable rate if it was lost at all. During the period when [Ca]s was stable at its nadir, we infer that calcium accumulated in tissue at the rate of net influx. On days 11 and 12, intravenous infusion of 465 mg of calcium had a negligible effect on [Ca]i. Between days 12 and 30, dialysis against physiologic or higher [Ca] and supplementation with calcium and calcitriol raised [Ca]i gradually but failed to correct it (Table 1). During days 1 to 30, we estimate that at least 2000 mg of exogenous calcium accumulated in a tissue reservoir. We sought other causes of hypocalcemia. The patient presented no clinical evidence of pancreatitis or myonecrosis.[8,9] Chelation by citrate could have reduced [Ca]i during RBC transfusions;[10] whereas [Ca]s typically remains normal during this process,[11] [Ca]s and [Ca]i fell in tandem in our patient (Figure 4), and hypocalcemia persisted for many days in the absence of transfusions. We considered the possibility that dexamethasone had caused hypocalcemia. Steroids have lowered [Ca]s by causing pancreatitis or tumor lysis,[12,13] or by interfering with intestinal calcium absorption in patients with hypoparathyroidism or vitamin D deficiency.[14,15] However, under ordinary circumstances, exogenous steroids inhibit bone formation while resorption continues unabated, and the skeleton incurs a net loss of calcium.[16] We conclude that dexamethasone did not reduce [Ca]s in our patient. Although chemotherapy had not been administered when hypocalcemia appeared, we wondered whether tumor lysis due to radiotherapy had lowered [Ca]s. We measured [P]s and [ur]s to investigate this possibility,[17] but neither was elevated. Hypomagnesemia may limit secretion of and end-organ responsiveness to PTH,[18,19] but [Mg]s was also normal. We considered the possibility that the skeleton had become an acutely receptive repository for calcium. In both Paget’s disease and secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT), rapid turnover of bone may produce an excess of unmineralized osteoid.[20,21] We therefore contemplated a scenario, similar to the post-parathyroidectomy hungry-bone syndrome,[22] in which calcium flux from the skeleton had fallen while mineralization of osteoid continued unabated. We speculated that radiation-induced damage to bone or to the parathyroid glands had created the hypothetical disequilibrium. Test results did not support this speculation. Although the concentration of alkaline phosphatase, a marker of bone formation, had been 714 units/L 5 months prior to admission, it was only 195 units/L on hospital day 2, and it fell further during the ensuing month (Table 1; Figure 2). In contrast, the concentration of N-telopeptide, a marker of bone resporption, was found to be markedly increased (Table 2), and [PTH] remained elevated despite radiotherapy to C7 and T1. The limited fields of radiation and the implied discrepancy between resorption and formation suggest that the skeleton was an unlikely repository for calcium. Although pharmacotherapy of SHPT or Paget’s disease may lower [Ca]s,[3,23] we can find no evidence that radiation of affected bone has produced this result. We presume that lytic metastases caused net calcium flux into plasma. Clinical and laboratory findings suggest that hypocalcemia did not result from drug toxicity, myonecrosis, pancreatitis, hypoparathyroidism, vitamin D deficiency, hypomagnesemia, tumor lysis syndrome, or hungry-bone syndrome. Because dialysate calcium levels were physiologic or higher, the only potential avenues of calcium loss from extracellular fluid were intestinal secretion and tissue deposition. We do not believe that muscle, pancreas, or bone served as a repository. Our patient’s [Ca]s had remained consistently normal before admission. Hypocalcemia was detected 2 days after the initiation of radiotherapy, which appeared to exacerbate necrosis of and hemorrhage into a renal cancer. Arterial embolization probably amplified the necrosis. [Ca]i rose minimally with an intravenous infusion of calcium during days 11 and 12; through day 30, [Ca]i responded gradually but incompletely to influx of hundreds of milligrams of calcium from oral supplements and dialysate. We propose that a large collection of tissue and blood provided a reservoir for extracellular calcium; [Ca]s fell to a level at which influx from all sources could compensate for efflux into the right retroperitoneum, and returned to normal when the reservoir could accept no more calcium. In extraordinary circumstances, it appears that extensive tumor necrosis and associated hemorrhage can cause hypocalcemia.
  23 in total

1.  Symptomatic hypocalcemia due to the inadvertent use of a calcium-free hemodialysate.

Authors:  Erlandas Ulozas; Srivasa B Chebrolu; Almothana Shanaah; Tarek M Daoud; David J Leehey; Todd S Ing
Journal:  Artif Organs       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 3.094

2.  The hypocalcemia of acute pancreatitis.

Authors:  G C Weir; P B Lesser; L J Drop; J E Fischer; A L Warshaw
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  1975-08       Impact factor: 25.391

Review 3.  Paget's disease of bone and calcium homeostasis: focus on bisphosphonate treatment.

Authors:  S A Polyzos; A D Anastasilakis; P Makras; E Terpos
Journal:  Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes       Date:  2011-08-02       Impact factor: 2.949

Review 4.  Tumor lysis syndrome: new challenges and recent advances.

Authors:  F Perry Wilson; Jeffrey S Berns
Journal:  Adv Chronic Kidney Dis       Date:  2014-01       Impact factor: 3.620

5.  Hypocalcemia and tetany with steroid-induced acute pancreatitis.

Authors:  A F Cortese; F Glenn
Journal:  Arch Surg       Date:  1968-01

6.  Clinical course after total parathyroidectomy without autotransplantation in patients with end-stage renal failure.

Authors:  S Stracke; P M Jehle; D Sturm; M H Schoenberg; U Widmaier; H G Beger; F Keller
Journal:  Am J Kidney Dis       Date:  1999-02       Impact factor: 8.860

7.  Hypomagnesemia and impaired parathyroid hormone secretion in chronic renal disease.

Authors:  P Mennes; R Rosenbaum; K Martin; E Slatopolsky
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  1978-02       Impact factor: 25.391

8.  Paget's disease of bone: histologic analysis of 754 patients.

Authors:  Sebastian Seitz; Matthias Priemel; Jozef Zustin; F Timo Beil; Jutta Semler; Helmut Minne; Thorsten Schinke; Michael Amling
Journal:  J Bone Miner Res       Date:  2009-01       Impact factor: 6.741

9.  Paricalcitol versus cinacalcet plus low-dose vitamin D therapy for the treatment of secondary hyperparathyroidism in patients receiving haemodialysis: results of the IMPACT SHPT study.

Authors:  Markus Ketteler; Kevin J Martin; Myles Wolf; Michael Amdahl; Mario Cozzolino; David Goldsmith; Amit Sharma; Steven Marx; Samina Khan
Journal:  Nephrol Dial Transplant       Date:  2012-03-02       Impact factor: 5.992

10.  Calcium supplementation after parathyroidectomy in dialysis and renal transplant patients.

Authors:  Marius C Florescu; Km Monirul Islam; Troy J Plumb; Sara Smith-Shull; Jennifer Nieman; Prasanti Mandalapu
Journal:  Int J Nephrol Renovasc Dis       Date:  2014-05-14
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