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So I ran into this a couple of times and thought i'd post and see what the mass public thinks of this. Kaplan notes say that in secondary hyperPTH you'll have low Ca+2 and low phosphorus levels, and I agree, but USMLE World twice now have said that in secondary hyperPTH you'll have low Ca+2 and High Phosphorus..
here's my reasoning for the low Ca and low phosphorus.. lets say it's due to renal failure.. so Vit D can't be activated and thus there's low blood Ca, PTH is then secreted to increase Ca levels, but it can't because the kidneys can't activated vit D, also pth causes a decrease in phosphorus (PTH= Phosphorus Trashing Hormone) so you end up with both low Ca and Low phosphorus.. but USMLE World says you'd have high Phosphorus..
I think my reasoning is correct and this is just another one of those mistakes in USMLE World... What do you guys think?
here's my reasoning for the low Ca and low phosphorus.. lets say it's due to renal failure.. so Vit D can't be activated and thus there's low blood Ca, PTH is then secreted to increase Ca levels, but it can't because the kidneys can't activated vit D, also pth causes a decrease in phosphorus (PTH= Phosphorus Trashing Hormone) so you end up with both low Ca and Low phosphorus.. but USMLE World says you'd have high Phosphorus..
I think my reasoning is correct and this is just another one of those mistakes in USMLE World... What do you guys think?