Parathyroid Basics
PTH Secretion
PTH Effects
Vitamin D Refresher
100
Which parathyroids have the following embryological origin: 3rd pharyngeal pouch, dorsal wings

Inferior parathyroid

*Think 3 is less than 4, 3 = inferior, 4 = superior

100

PTH secretion is primarily controlled by _______

Free (ionized) calcium, decreased free calcium --> increased PTH secretion

100

What enzyme does PTH upregulate to increase serum calcium?

1-alpha-hydroxylase

100

What is the active form of vitamin D?

Calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol)

200

Name the cell type that releases PTH

Chief cells

200

Mild hypomagnesemia causes what change in PTH secretion?

Increased PTH secretion!

↓ extracellular magnesium → ↓ activation of the calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) on parathyroid cells → ↑ PTH secretion (CaSR normally suppresses PTH secretion)

200

Where in the renal tubule does PTH increase Ca2+ reabsorption?

Distal convoluted tubule

200

Where is vitamin D converted to its storage form and active form?

Storage form: liver by 25-hydroxylase

Active form: kidney by 1-alpha-hydroxylase

300

Name the cell type that contain calcium sensing receptors 

Oxyphil cells

300

Marked hypomagnesemia causes what change in PTH secretion?

Decrease PTH secretion!

Magnesium is essential for the cellular machinery required to produce and release PTH.

300

Does PTH or calcitriol decrease phosphate reabsorption in the renal tubule?

PTH

300

What is the impact of calcitriol in the GI tract?

Increase intestinal absorption of calcium and phosphate

400

What type of receptor is the calcium sensing receptors?

G-protein coupled receptor

400

An increase in albumin causes what change in PTH?

No change, PTH secretion is not directly affected by albumin levels. When albumin levels change, total calcium changes proportionally, but ionized calcium typically remains stable.

400

How does PTH increase bone resorption?

↑ expression of RANKL on osteoblasts

PTH ↑ expression of RANKL on osteoblasts → RANKL binds the osteoclastic RANK receptor → ↑ osteoclast activity → bone resorption → release of ionized Ca2+

400

How does calcitriol impact the bone at low vs high levels?

Low levels: Bone mineralization

High levels: Bone resorption

500

What is the primary blood supply to both superior and inferior parathyroid glands?

Inferior thyroid artery

500

Low pH causes what change in PTH secretion? Why?

↓ pH → ↑ H+ in serum binding to proteins → ↓ Ca2+ binding to proteins → ↑ ionized Ca2+ concentration → ↓ PTH

500

What is the main effect on serum calcium and phosphate for the following hormones: PTH, calcitriol, calcitonin?

PTH: increases calcium, decreases phosphate

Calcitriol: increases calcium, increases phosphate

Calcitonin: decreases calcium, decreases phosphate

500

Where is the hormone that is stimulated by high phosphate/calcitriol and inhibits 1-alpha-hydroxylase released form?

Osteocytes and osteoblasts in the bone

Hormone in question: FGF23