Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2016) 41 EP189 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.41.EP189

ECE2016 Eposter Presentations Calcium and Vitamin D metabolism (61 abstracts)

Severe hypercalcemia due to the vitamin D intoxication presenting with acute renal failure

Hande Peynirci 1 , Pınar Sisman 2 , Fethullah Aydın 2 , Canan Ersoy 2 & Erdinç Ertürk 2


1Kastamonu State Hospital, Kastamonu, Turkey; 2Uludag University Medical School Internal Medicine Endocrinology and Metabolism Department, Bursa, Turkey.


Introduction: Hypervitaminosis D is a rarely reported condition. It may be observed more frequently because of the recent increase in supplement use of vitamin D. Herein, we report a case of vitamin D intoxication which was the first case with this high level of calcium as we searched the literature.

Case report: A 57-year old hypertensive woman admitted to our emergency room with symptoms of constipation, loss of appetite and confusion. Blood pressure, heart rate, and body temperature were 150/90 mmHg, 62 beats/min, and 36.6°C, respectively. Dried mucous membranes and decreased skin turgor tonus were observed. Routine chemistry revealed; glucose 98 mg/dl (70–100), urea 88 mg/dl (10–50), creatinine 3.4 mg/dl (0.6–1.3),albumin 3.8 g/dl (3.5–5.0), serum calcium 22.7 mg/dl (8.4–10.2), serum phosphorus 2.5 mg/dl (2.3–4.7). Chest X-ray and the renal ultrasound was normal. Corrected QT was found 260 m/s in electrocardiography.

The patient reported that she had been operated due to diagnosis of multinodular goiter and hypothyroidism and hypoparathyroidism had developed postsurgically. She admitted to the another hospital one month ago with a calcium value of 7.6 mg/dl. At the time of admission, she was taking calcium 4000 mg/day, cholecalciferol 3520 IU/day, calcitriol 0.5 μg/day. Treatment was changed as calcium 6000 mg/day, cholecalciferol 5280 IU/day, calcitriol 1 μg/day. She was on 125 μg L-thyroxine therapy with a thyroid stimulating hormone level of 2.4 μIU/ml (0.35–4.94 μIU/ml).

The patient was hospitalized to our endocrinology clinic and taken to the low calcium hemodialysis. After hemodialysis, her calcium level decreased to 13.7 mg/dl. Then she was managed by continuous saline infusion and diuretics. The level of serum calcium and creatinine was 8.5 mg/dl, 1.1 mg/dl, respectively on the 8th day of treatment.

Conclusion: Vitamin D supplementation should be appropriately monitored due to potential risk of intoxication.

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