Vitamin A-Induced Hypercalcemia in Burn Patients: A Case Study.
Publication/Presentation Date
11-2-2022
Abstract
Vitamin and steroid supplementation such as oxandrolone are commonly given to speed the recovery process in severe burn injuries. Vitamin A is administered concurrently with steroids because of its pro-inflammatory and positive effects on wound healing. However, vitamin A supplementation warrants caution as hypercalcemia can result from vitamin A overdose. Our case involves an 18-year-old male injured in an oil field explosion who presented with 55% total body surface area (TBSA) partial- and full-thickness burns. Following successful resuscitation, he was given vitamin A, oxandrolone, vitamin C, and zinc sulfate as part of the standard vitamin supplementation. On hospital day (HD) 33, serum calcium levels were noted to be elevated and increased to 13 mg/dL a few days later. Parathyroid hormone and vitamin D levels were found to be within normal range, and urine analysis showed normal calcium excretion. Subsequent assessment of vitamin A levels revealed significantly elevated levels at 93 mcg/dL. Vitamin A supplementation was discontinued, and the patient was discharged on HD 42. At the 1-month follow-up, serum calcium levels were normal, which links the hypercalcemia to vitamin A overdose. This case highlights the importance of considering vitamin A overdose as a cause for asymptomatic hypercalcemia with a normal parathyroid and vitamin D workup. While routine, vitamin A supplementation in burn patients calls for assessment of both serum calcium and vitamin A levels throughout the hospital stay to prevent hypercalcemia and its negative effects.
Volume
43
Issue
6
First Page
1445
Last Page
1448
ISSN
1559-0488
Published In/Presented At
Zeitouni, F., Zhu, C., Pang, A., O'Banion, S., Bharadia, D., & Griswold, J. (2022). Vitamin A-Induced Hypercalcemia in Burn Patients: A Case Study. Journal of burn care & research : official publication of the American Burn Association, 43(6), 1445–1448. https://doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac101
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
35867995
Department(s)
Department of Surgery
Document Type
Article