Information about symptoms of low vitamin d levels





 

Parathyroid Surgery and Hyperparathyroidism Surgery. Norman Parathyroid Center Performing parathyroid surgery for parathyroid disease and hyperparathyroidism.

Low Vitamin D levels in parathyroid disease. Primary hyperpathyroidims and Vitamin D, secondary hyperparathyroidism and Vitamin D
Low Vitamin D levels are very common in patients with
hyperparathyroidism. Many patients with parathyroid disease (and High
Calcium) will have low Vitamin D levels in their blood. Low Vitamin D
is quite common, but MANY endocrinologists don't understand the
connection between low Vitamin D and parathyroid tumors... and will
confuse the issue (and the patient with parathyroid disease) by saying
the patient with low Vitamin D levels has "Secondary"
hyperparathyroidism... This is a myth. We will bust the Low Vitamin D
myth on this page...
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Low Vitamin D and secondary hyperparathyroidism. Vitamin D levels.LOW
VITAMIN D is discussed on this page of parathyroid.com. This is an
advanced parathyroid page, and if you have recently been told that you
have hyperparathyroidism (parathyroid disease) and/or high calcium in
your blood, then PLEASE read our other parathyroid pages first. We
will give a short synopsis of Vitamin D in the blood, and low vitamin
D levels... with some facts and take away points. Then, this page will
get more complex. If your endocrinologist tells you that your calcium
is high because your Vitamin D levels are low... and wants to give you
Vitamin D to make your calcium go down... then you should print this
page and take it to them. This is wrong. As shown below, low vitamin D
levels can never make calcium levels go into the high range. The
bottom of this page is complex and written for doctors and advanced
patients. The top of this page on Vitamin D is for most patients...
Here we go.
 

Overview of Vitamin D
Low Vitamin D, Vit D is low in blood. Vitamin D is essential to our
bodies. We can't make it, so we have to get it in our diet, or get
outside and have the sun make it for us (yep, sun light on our skin
causes our skin to make Vitamin D.

Low Vitamin D, Vit D is low in blood.Vitamin D does ONE THING in our
bodies. Only one thing... it helps our intestine to absorb calcium
from the foods we eat. Thus, Vitamin D increases the amount of calcium
in our bodies. If our Vitamin D levels are low, then our intestines
have a hard time absorbing calcium. This is why milk is fortified with
Vitamin D. Did you ever notice that the milk you buy has "Vitamin D
Fortified" written on it. We want our kids to drink milk so they get
lots of calcium to build their bones strong... but without the Vitamin
D, most of the calcium in the milk won't get absorbed. Our intestines
MUST have at least a little Vitamin D to absorb calcium. For you older
people out there, did you notice that most of the calcium supplements
(Citracal, Oscal, Caltrate, etc, etc) will have Vitamin D added to the
calcium pills? This is because our intestines need the Vitamin D
molecule to absorb the calcium molecule through the intestinal wall
and transport it into our blood. AGAIN.... Vitamin D does only ONE
thing in the human... it helps our intestine to absorb calcium.
Low Vitamin D, Vit D is low in blood.Thus, increasing a person's
Vitamin D levels will increase the amount of calcium they absorb from
their diet. If a person takes more Vitamin D, then the intestines will
become more efficient at absorbing the calcium molecules in our diet,
and these calcium molecules will be absorbed... your calcium will go
UP.

 
Vitamin D and It's Relationship to Hyperparathyroidism

Low Vitamin D, Vit D is low in blood.Hyperparathyroidism is associated
with high calcium in the blood. The cause is a parathyroid tumor. This
is discussed throughout this website, so we will not go into it here.
Basically, a tumor grows from one of your parathyroid glands... this
tumor produces parathyroid hormone which takes calcium out of your
bones and puts it into your blood. You get osteoporosis and feel bad
because of the high calcium in the blood.
Low Vitamin D, Vit D is low in blood.The body doesn't want the calcium
to be high... So, it will try to get rid of the calcium in the
urine... which is why many patients (about 1/3) will have high calcium
in the urine (they can get kidney stones from this).

Low Vitamin D, Vit D is low in blood.The body also wants to shut down
calcium absorption from your intestines. It does this by limiting the
amount of Vitamin D in your body. Thus, if your body determines that
your calcium is too high... it can decrease the amount of calcium that
is absorbed from your intestines by decreasing the amount of Vitamin D
available. If your Vitamin D levels are decreased, you can't absorb so
much calcium from your diet. This is a protective measure.
 

Vitamin D in Patients with PRIMARY Hyperparathyroidism
We began measuring Vitamin D levels in patients with
hyperparathyroidism in the mid-1990's. For the past several years, we
have measured it in most patients, and beginning in 2006 we began
measuring Vitamin D in every patient with PRIMARY hyperparathyroidism.
Here is what we found in our recently published article on 1587
patients with primary hyperparathyroidism:

Vitamin D levels low67% of all patients with primary
hyperparathyroidism will have LOW Vitamin D-25 Levels! This is
1039 patients out of 1587 in our study. 594 patients (38%) had
levels below 20 ng/ml with an average Vitamin D level of 14.6.
Vitamin D levels normal.33% of all patients with primary
hyperparathyroidism will have NORMAL Vitamin D-25 Levels (above
30). Their average Vitamin D level was 35.3 ng/ml.

Vitamin D levels high.0 % of all patients with primary
hyperparathyroidism will have HIGH Vitamin D-25 Levels (we've only
seen it a dozen or so times when examining Vitamin-D levels in
over 8000 patients with parathyroid tumors).
Vitamin D levels high.As the calcium level increases, the level of
Vitamin D-25 decreases. The following graph shows this nicely.
When we look at 1587 patients with a parathyroid tumor (we know it
because we removed the tumor and gave the patient a picture of
it), we see that those with higher calcium levels tend to have
lower Vitamin D levels. As you will read below, this is because
the body is trying to protect itself from the high calcium, and it
is converting one form of Vitamin D (Vit-D-25) into another form
(Vit-D-1-25). This serves to decrease the amount of calcium
absorbed from our diet, to keep the calcium from getting even
higher. Read that again... the body is protecting itself from the
high calcium. It does this by decreasing the amount of Vitamin D
in our body so we don't absorb as much calcium in our diet. As you
can see from the graph below, the higher a patient's calcium goes,
the lower the Vitamin D goes.

Vitamin D-25 in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. Vitamin D levels are low in patients with a parathyroid adenoma and hyperparathyroidism.
Figure 1: Vitamin D-25 levels in 1587 patients with primary
hyperparathyroidism due to a parathyroid tumor. This graph shows the
average Vit-D-25 level for all patients. The line is an average, so
there are about half of the patients who have levels above the line,
and about half of them have levels below the line. As you can see, the
line goes down as the calcium levels increase. Said more
scientifically, Vitamin-D25 levels decreased linearly as calcium
levels increased such that 71% of those with calcium levels above 12
mg/dl had Vitamin-D25 less than 20 (p<0.001, R=0.91).

Most patients with a parathyroid tumor will have low Vitamin D-25
levels. Those patients with more severe primary hyperparathyroidism
(those with larger tumors and those who have had the tumor a longer
time) will have higher blood calcium levels, which are associated with
lower Vitamin D-25 levels. The lower your Vitamin D-25, the longer you
have had hyperparathyroidism and a parathyroid tumor in your neck.
Low Vitamin D is seen in one third of all patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.We
have graphed this information using a different graph so you can see
it clearly. This shows that nearly 40% of all patients with PRIMARY
hyperparathyroidism have Vitamin D-25 levels that are below 20 ng/ml.
60% have vitamin D levels above 20, but that includes 29% who have
levels between 20 and 30, which is considered "deficient". Nobody with
a parathyroid tumor has high Vitamin D-25 levels. Thus, their body is
trying to protect them from the high calcium, decreasing the amount of
Vitamin D levels so they don't absorb so much calcium.

Low Vitamin D is seen in many patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.Well.......
what is happening in these patients? What is the difference? Each of
these patients had a high calcium levels in their blood and high (or
inappropriately normal) PTH levels. Thus, each of them had primary
hyperparathyroidism. Well, every one of these patients was operated on
by us, and we found (as expected) that they all have the exact same
parathyroid tumor! (sorry, we are getting complex now... if we lose
you, then go to the basic pages and come back here later). That is,
97% of those with LOW vitamin D levels have a parathyroid adenoma and
3% have hyperplasia. 97% of those with NORMAL Vit D-25 levels have a
parathyroid adenoma and 3% have hyperplasia. Thus, there is no
difference in these people's necks.......they all have the same
parathyroid tumors causing their hyperparathyroidism... The Vitamin D
levels have NOTHING to do with their disease. It is the parathyroid
tumor that is causing the body to decrease the amount of Vitamin D-25.
Not visa versa.
Low Vitamin D levels have NOTHING to do with parathyroid pathology.
This graph shows that 97% of people with primary hyperparathyroidism
have a parathyroid adenoma (tumor) and 3% have hyperplasia...
REGARDLESS of what their Vitamin D level is. Thus, if your calcium is
high, you have a parathyroid tumor and it doesn't matter what your
Vitamin D level is. The vitamin D is not causing the parathyroid
problem... The low vitamin D is GOOD... it is protecting you from even
higher calcium levels.

Low Vitamin D in blood is seen in MANY patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.THEREFORE:
IF YOU HAVE HIGH CALCIUM, YOU HAVE A PARATHYROID TUMOR IN YOUR NECK
AND YOU NEED AN OPERATION TO REMOVE THE TUMOR. Vitamin D levels have
nothing to do with it! The low vitamin-D levels is the body's way of
preventing the intestines from absorbing more calcium! The body is
protecting itself! DO NOT AVOID SURGERY BECAUSE YOUR DOCTOR SAYS YOUR
VITAMIN D LEVEL IS LOW... AND THE LOW VIT-D IS THE CAUSE OF YOUR
PROBLEMS. THIS IS WRONG! This is a myth, and this myth is busted. The
low Vitamin D did NOT cause the high PTH and high calcium... in truth,
the parathyroid tumor is making PTH which is taking calcium out of the
bones and putting it into the blood. Furthermore, it is very typical
for patients with parathyroid tumors to have calcium levels that go up
and down... high sometimes and back to normal some times..... this is
typical for patients with parathyroid tumors. The tumor doesn't
regulate the calcium well, and the levels go up and down.
Low Vitamin D is seen in many patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.Why
are we discussing Vitamin D and hyperparathyroidism? Because this has
become a HUGE problem in late 2006 and into 2008! Now that Vitamin D
is easy to measure, many doctors (endocrinologists) will measure
Vitamin D levels on all patients with high calcium in the blood. They
will also measure the PTH levels... they are trying to prove
(correctly) that the high calcium in the body is due to a parathyroid
tumor. Here is where they go wrong... and this is getting very
complex.... If the Vitamin D level is low, then they think this is the
MAIN PROBLEM. They think that the low vitamin D levels cause too
little calcium to be absorbed in the intestines. They think that this
low amount of calcium is sensed by normal parathyroid glands which
causes the normal parathyroid glands to appropriately increase their
production... causing a high PTH level. They further believe that this
high PTH level will take calcium out of the bones and increase the
calcium in the blood. Thus, they think the PTH levels are high because
of the low vitamin D levels... thus they think the high PTH levels are
high SECONDARY to the low vitamin D levels... thus they will tell you
that you have SECONDARY hyperparathyroidism. THIS IS A MYTH. THIS IS
NOT CORRECT. Measuring Vit D levels has nothing to do with making the
diagnosis of hyperparathyroidism. Low Vit D levels will NEVER cause
high calcium levels. It is not possible.

Update: On July 19, 2007 the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM)
published a review on Vitamin D and these authors report the same
results that we do here... that high levels of PTH will decrease
Vitamin D-25 in many patient's blood. If your doctors continue to give
you Vitamin D when your calcium and/or PTH are high, then you ask them
(kindly!) to read this web page and this NEJM article: Holick M.
Vitamin D Deficiency. N Engl J Med 2007;357:266-81. Having low vitamin
D is CAUSED by hyperparathyroidism, not the other way around!!!
Low Vitamin D is seen in many patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.Getting
complex even further... If you are still with us... If the low vitamin
D was the starting point... if the low Vitamin D was the main
problem... and this caused the parathyroid glands to increase their
parathyroid hormone production... then I would be an idiot to operate
on these people... and if I did, I would find them to all have normal
parathyroid glands... they wouldn't have 3 normal parathyroid glands
and one parathyroid tumor! If the low Vitamin D caused the parathyroid
glands to get big... they would all get big... but that is NOT what
happens! Patients with low Vitamin D levels have parathyroid tumors
just like people with normal vitamin D levels. Remember, parathyroid
adenomas are tumors. The entire tumor mass is made of cells from one
parent cell that went crazy and reproduced itself millions of times.
Parathyroid adenomas are TUMORS... (did you see our page showing 80
typical photos of these tumors?). Low Vitamin D does not cause TUMORS
to grow. It is the other way around.

Low Vitamin D is seen in many patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.To
defend the endocrinologists (who mean well, but don't see enough
patients with hyperparathyroidism to be "expert" at it... we see
3,500++ patients per year with this problem!!), it is possible to have
LOW vitamin D levels to cause your PTH to go up a very little bit.
BUT... this will NEVER increase the calcium in the blood, and the PTH
will only go up slightly. Sometimes your endocrinologist will try to
give you Vitamin D as a trial... to see if your parathyroid problem is
due to low Vitamin D. The theory is that giving you Vitamin D will
cure the cause of the high PTH... and all your labs will go back to
normal... They call this secondary hyperparathyroidism and they will
give you a prescription for high doses of Vitamin D. HOWEVER, this can
be dangerous... if your calcium is above 11.5, the additional Vitamin
D can make your calcium go above 12 and we have even seen 2 patients
have a stroke because of this. We have even seen an endocrinologist
get sued for malpractice because he gave a patient with primary
hyperparathyroidism high doses of Vitamin D which caused the patients
calcium to go high and cause the patient to have a stroke! This is not
a smart move. If your calcium is high, you should NOT take Vitamin D
in large doses. If you do, you will find that it almost always makes
your symptoms of hyperparathyroidism worse! Is it going to cause you
to have a stroke??? nope.... but it will make you feel bad and it will
waste your time and money. If your calcium is high, you have a
parathyroid tumor (PRIMARY hyperparathyroidism) regardless of what
your Vitamin D level is.
 

Low Vitamin D is seen in many patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.Remember
above when we were discussing Low vitamin D... saying that decreasing
the Vitamin D in your body is the body's way to protect itself from
the high calcium? If this is true, then we should see the low Vitamin
D levels in patients with hyperparathyroidism return to NORMAL once
the parathyroid tumor is removed. Well, in January 2007 we began a
trial to test this theory scientifically (we had observed it many
times, but we decided to test it scientifically so we can publish it
in a major medical journal... we publish on parathyroid topics about
every other month). Guess what!!!??? 95.6% of all patients with LOW
vitamin D levels had NORMAL vitamin D levels 1 month after their
parathyroid tumor was removed!! Thus, proving yet another way, the
body doesn't like having high calcium which is due to the parathyroid
tumor. The body turns off Vit D so we don't absorb as much calcium.
When the parathyroid tumor is removed, the body turns the Vitamin D
back on and the low vitamin D levels increase back to normal.
The bottom line again: If your calcium is high, you almost certainly
have a parathyroid tumor. If your calcium is high and your Vitamin D
is low, you STILL have a parathyroid tumor. If your calcium is high
and your Vitamin D is normal, you STILL have a parathyroid tumor. When
you get your parathyroid tumor removed, your Vitamin D level will
almost always correct itself within 1 month!

Low Vitamin D is seen in many patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.If
your endocrinologist says "you have secondary hyperparathyroidism
because your Vitamin D level is low", then you MUST print this page
and take it to them! This is not correct. You have PRIMARY
hyperparathyroidism... and 67% of people with primary
hyperparathyroidism have a low Vitamin D level (below 30 ng/ml)... it
is expected. Get the tumor removed and get on with your life!
Secondary hyperparathyroidism due to low vitamin D is never associated
with a high calcium level in your blood. NEVER. If they put you on
Vitamin D and then measure your calcium a month later... and your
calcium gets better.... then they are fooling you and themselves... it
will be bad again one month later, and you will feel bad. Trust me!
This will make you feel bad. Get the tumor removed!
UPDATE.

In June 2008 Dr Norman gave a lecture to the Endocrine Society's
Annual Meeting in San Francisco, CA on Vitamin D in parathyroid
disease. Here is an abstract of this talk; the journal article will be
published later in 2008. Print this and take it to your doctor who put
you on Vitamin-D. Most endocrinologists know this already, but many do
not:
Vitamin D -25 is suppressed and Vitamin D-1-25 is increased in
patients with primary hyperparathyroidism in linear fashion as calcium
levels increase, returning to normal within weeks of tumor removal. A
protective mechanism is in play.

Overview: Vitamin D-25 is converted to Vitamin D-1-25 in patients with
primary HPT in a linear fashion as calcium levels increase. Thus the
vast majority of patients with primary HPT will have low Vit D-25 that
normalizes by itself in most patients within several months.
Objective: Vitamin D-25 is often measured in patients with apparent
primary HPT to rule out a possible secondary cause. This study was
undertaken to examine if a relationship exists between Vit-D levels
and parathyroid pathology in patients with elevated calcium levels.

Methods: A prospective, single institution study measured preoperative
Vitamin D (25OH and 1-25OH) in 1,587 patients undergoing surgery for
sporadic primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) over a 1-year period. All
patients underwent curative parathyroidectomy with pathology noted.
Patients were put on nominal doses of Vit-D postop contained within
supplemental calcium tablets (Citracal+D; 250 IU cholecalciferol
daily) for two months; none took additional Vit-D. Blood levels were
measured at 1 and 2 months post-op.
Results: All patients had primary HPT with high serum calcium and PTH
preop that normalized at all postop measures indicating cure. The
average preop Vit-D25 was 25.8+10 ng/ml (range 4-65). 1039 patients
(67%) had Vit-D25 levels below 30 ng/ml preop, while 594 patients
(38%) had levels below 20 ng/ml preop (mean 14.6, range 4-19), No
patient had high Vit-D25 preop. Vit-D25 levels decreased linearly as
calcium levels increased such that 71% of those with levels above 12
mg/dl had Vit-D25 <20 (p<0.01, R=0.91).The levels of Vit-D1-25 were
low in 0%, normal in 58.5%, and high in 41.5% (mean 56.2 +
14)(p<0.01). The findings at surgery were identical (p=0.98) for those
with low vs. normal Vit-D25 (single adenoma=92%, double adenoma=6%,
4-gland hyperplasia=3%). 82% of patients with low preop Vit-D25 had
increased levels at 1 month postop (mean 41.4+12, range 17-63,
p<0.005), increasing to 91% at 2 months. All patients with normal
Vit-D25 preop remained normal postop. 68% showed decreased Vit-D1-25
into the normal range (p<0.001) within 1 month of surgery.

Conclusion: Vit-D25 levels decrease in a linear fashion as calcium
levels rise in patients with primary HPT. Overall, 38% will have
Vit-D25 levels less than 20 ng/ml, increasing to 71% of those with
calcium levels above 12mg/dl. Vit-D1-25 shows the opposite pattern
suggesting a protective mechanism. The pathology found at surgery is
identical in PHPT patients with low versus normal Vit-D25 indicating
no causal relationship. Low Vit-D25 should not be interpreted as
signaling secondary HPT in patients with elevated calcium levels. The
vast majority of patients will normalize their low Vit-D25 and high
Vit-D1-25 levels within 2 months of tumor removal.
This page was last updated 02/20/2010

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