# Two Cases of Primary Hyperparathyroidism During Pregnancy and Post-Partum

**Authors:** F N U Varsha, Michael Grimes, Gayatri Jaiswal, Patricia Bononi

PMC · DOI: 10.1210/jcemcr/luaf177 · 2025-08-14

## TL;DR

This paper presents two cases of rare parathyroid disorders during pregnancy, showing how surgery can safely manage severe symptoms and improve outcomes for mothers and babies.

## Contribution

The study emphasizes symptom severity as a key factor for surgery in pregnant patients with parathyroid issues, challenging traditional calcium-level-based decisions.

## Key findings

- Parathyroidectomy in the third trimester safely reduced maternal calcium and PTH levels and resulted in healthy deliveries.
- Symptomatic patients should be considered for surgery even with borderline calcium levels, while asymptomatic cases can be managed expectantly.
- Early diagnosis and individualized treatment plans are crucial for optimizing outcomes in pregnant patients with PHPT.

## Abstract

Primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) is rare in pregnancy and poses diagnostic challenges due to overlapping symptoms. This case series highlights diagnostic and management challenges in pregnant patients. Case 1: A 42-year-old woman at 33 weeks’ gestation exhibited severe nausea and fatigue. Laboratory testing revealed elevated calcium 13.2 mg/dL (3.29 mmol/L) (reference range, 8.4-10.3 mg/dL [2.2-2.6 mmol/L]) and parathyroid hormone (PTH) 215 pg/mL (23.89 nmol/L) (reference range, 11-68 pg/mL [SI: 1.6-7.2 pmol/L]). Neck ultrasound identified bilateral parathyroid adenomas and abdominal ultrasound showed polyhydramnios. Parathyroidectomy resulted in calcium drop to 9.5 mg/dL (2.27 mmol/L) and PTH to 12 pg/mL (1.33 pmol/L). She delivered a healthy infant. Case 2: A 39-year-old woman at 39 weeks’ underwent a cesarean delivery due to transverse fetal lie. She had high prepartum calcium of 14.2 mg/dL (3.55 mmol/L) and PTH 319 pg/mL (33.81 pmol/L). Post pregnancy, bilateral neck exploration and left inferior parathyroid excision decreased calcium to 8.9 mg/dL (2.22 mmol/L) and PTH to 16.5 pg/mL (1.75 pmol/L). These cases highlight that symptom severity—not just calcium level—should guide parathyroidectomy. Third-trimester surgery can be safely performed when symptomatic; asymptomatic patients may be managed expectantly. Early recognition and individualized management optimize maternal and fetal outcomes.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Primary hyperparathyroidism (MONDO:0010837), Polyhydramnios (MONDO:0004585)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** PTH (parathyroid hormone) [NCBI Gene 5741] {aka FIH1, PTH1}
- **Diseases:** polyhydramnios (MESH:D006831), transverse fetal lie (MESH:D005315), nausea (MESH:D009325), parathyroid adenomas (MESH:D010282), fatigue (MESH:D005221), PHPT (MESH:D049950)
- **Chemicals:** calcium (MESH:D002118)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12351268/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12351268