Consistent with hypercalcemia


Hypercalcemia can produce a wide variety of physical and mental symptoms. Mental symptoms can range from vague complaints to symptoms resembling personality disorders and psychosis.

Circulating calcium is normally controlled within very narrow limits. This patient's results indicate marked hypercalcemia combined with depressed phosphate. The chloride-to-phosphate ratio can be a rough guide to whether a decrease in phosphate is specific for phosphate, or affects all negative ions. In this case, the elevation in the CL:PO4 ratio indicates that phosphate is specifically decreased.

The differential diagnosis of hypercalcemia includes hyperparathyroidism, drug-induced effects, hypercalcemia of malignancy, sarcoidosis, multiple myeloma, and other less common conditions. The combination of elevated calcium and decreased phosphate is most commonly associated with hyperparathyroidism.

Return to case 6