The goal of treatment is to relieve symptoms and to bring calcium and phosphorus levels in your body back into a standard range.
Treatment usually includes:
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Oral calcium. Oral calcium supplements — as tablets, chews or liquid — can increase calcium levels in your blood. However, at high doses, calcium supplements can cause digestive side effects, such as constipation, in some people.
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Vitamin D. High doses of vitamin D, generally in the form of calcitriol, can help your body absorb calcium and eliminate phosphorus. Calcitriol is a prescription from your health care provider for active vitamin D. This is different from the usual supplements you can get without a prescription.
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Magnesium. If your magnesium level is low and you're experiencing symptoms of hypoparathyroidism, you may need to take a magnesium supplement.
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Thiazide diuretics. If your calcium levels remain low even with treatment, or if the amount of calcium in your urine is very high, thiazide diuretics can help decrease the amount of calcium lost through your urine.
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Parathyroid hormone replacement. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved parathyroid hormone (Natpara) for low blood calcium due to hypoparathyroidism. This is a once-daily injection. Because of the potential risk of bone cancer (osteosarcoma), a risk observed in animal studies, this drug is available only through a restricted program. The program limits use to people whose calcium levels can't be controlled with calcium and vitamin D supplements and who understand the risks.
Diet
Your health care provider might recommend that you consult a registered dietitian, who is likely to advise a diet that's:
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Rich in calcium. This includes dairy products, green leafy vegetables, broccoli and foods with added calcium, such as some orange juices and breakfast cereals.
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Low in phosphorus. This means avoiding carbonated soft drinks, which contain phosphorus in the form of phosphoric acid, and limiting processed foods, meats, hard cheeses, nuts and whole grains.
Intravenous infusion
If you need immediate symptom relief, you may need to stay in the hospital so that you can receive calcium by a small tube in a vein in your hand or arm (intravenously). You'll also take oral vitamin D tablets. After you leave the hospital, you'll continue to take calcium and vitamin D tablets.
Monitoring
Your health care provider will regularly check your blood to monitor levels of calcium and phosphorus. At first, these tests will probably be weekly to monthly. Eventually, you'll need blood tests just twice a year. Regular testing allows adjustment of your supplemental calcium dose if your blood-calcium levels rise or fall.
Because hypoparathyroidism is usually a long-lasting disorder, testing and treatment generally is lifelong.