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  lüll Hypercalcemia during pregnancy, puerperium, and lactation: review and a case  report of hypercalcemic crisis after delivery due to excessive production of  PTH-related protein (PTHrP) without malignancy (humoral hypercalcemia of  pregnancy) Sato KEndocr J  2008[Dec]; 55 (6): 959-66Hypercalcemia during pregnancy or after delivery is uncommon, and mostly  associated with primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT). If unrecognized, it may  increase maternal and fetal morbidity. In a very few patients with PHPT,  hypercalcemic crisis develops during pregnancy and particularly after delivery,  since calcium transport from the mother to the fetus is abruptly disrupted.  Hypercalcemia may also develop in pregnant women due to PTH-related protein  (PTHrP)-producing malignant tumors (humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy). Since  PTHrP is produced physiologically in fetal and maternal tissues, hypercalcemia  may occasionally develop during pregnancy, puerperium, and lactation due to  excessive production of PTHrP in the placenta and/or mammary glands. PTHrP may  also be involved in milk-alkali syndrome that develops during pregnancy. Although  non-malignant hypercalcemia is usually mild, we report a 28-years-old pregnant  woman who developed hypercalcemic crisis after normal delivery of an infant. On  the first postpartum day, the corrected serum calcium concentration increased to  19.4 mg/dl with a markedly increased serum level of PTHrP (28.4 pmol/L) (normal  <1.1 pmol/L). After administration of saline and pamidronate, the serum levels of  calcium and PTHrP rapidly normalized. Extensive examination revealed no malignant  lesion, suggesting that the placenta may have been producing an excessive amount  of PTHrP (humoral hypercalcemia of pregnancy). We review case reports of  non-malignant hypercalcemic crisis associated with pregnancy indexed in PubMed in  which serum levels of intact PTH and/or PTHrP were described, and stress that  rapid control of hypercalcemia is mandatory to save the life of the mother and  the infant.|Adult[MESH]|Calcium/metabolism[MESH]|Delivery, Obstetric[MESH]|Female[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Hypercalcemia/complications/diagnosis/*etiology[MESH]|Hyperparathyroidism, Primary/*complications/diagnosis[MESH]|Parathyroid Hormone-Related Protein/adverse effects/blood/*metabolism[MESH]|Postpartum Period/*blood[MESH]|Pregnancy Complications/blood/*diagnosis/metabolism[MESH]|Pregnancy/metabolism[MESH] |