| Literature DB >> 3686151 |
J K Jenkins1, T R Best, S A Nicks, F Y Murphy, K L Bussell, D L Vesely.
Abstract
A man with severe hypercalcemia (22 mg/dl) secondary to ingestion of a calcium carbonate antacid (Tums) was admitted with obtundation and hyperreflexia, which disappeared with treatment. Laboratory values, which were consistent with milk-alkali syndrome, included low-normal serum chloride (96 mEq/L), normal phosphorus of 2.7 mg/dl (phosphorus is usually normal to increased in this syndrome), increased blood urea nitrogen (39 mg/dl), and increased serum creatinine (2.4 mg/dl). A normal C-terminal parathormone level helped distinguish this patient from patients with severe hypercalcemia due to primary hyperthyroidism. The ECG revealed a widened rather than a shortened QT interval, as well as a J wave, a broadened T wave, and a U wave with this marked hypercalcemia, all of which reverted to normal with correction of the hypercalcemia.Entities:
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Year: 1987 PMID: 3686151 DOI: 10.1097/00007611-198711000-00028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: South Med J ISSN: 0038-4348 Impact factor: 0.954