A 50-year-old woman presented with a two-day history of diarrhea, vomiting, progressive numbness around her mouth and generalized body cramps. One year before presentation, she had undergone a total thyroidectomy for a multinodular goiter. She also had a history of depression, hypertension and chronic renal impairment. She reported taking citalopram, rabeprazole for gastroesophageal reflux disease, calcium carbonate, levothyroxine and vitamin B 12 . Her vital signs were stable. Trousseau sign was evidenced a few seconds after the sphygmomanometer cuff was inflated to more than the systolic blood pressure on the left upper arm (Figure 1, Appendix 1, video available at www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content /full/cmaj.100613/DC1).Laboratory investigations showed normal sodium, potassium and phosphorous values, but a corrected calcium level of 1.49 (normal 2.14- A diagnosis of iatrogenic hypoparathyroidism was made. Hypocalcemia was most likely caused by vomiting, resulting in malabsorption of oral calcium carbonate. The patient's symptoms, signs and biochemical abnormalities resolved after the intravenous administration of calcium gluconate and magnesium, and she was discharged home on oral calcium supplements and alfacalcidol.Trousseau sign is elicited in hypocalcemia when the ionized calcium level is 1.75-2.25 mmol/L.1 The hand adopts a characteristic posture when the sphygmomanometer cuff is inflated above the systolic blood pressure within 3 minutes. The metacarpophalangeal joints are flexed, the interphalangeal joints of the fingers and thumb are extended and the thumb adopts a posture of opposition (main d'accoucheur).
2Trousseau sign is more specific than Chvostek sign for latent tetany, which can be caused by hypocalcemia, hypomagnesemia and metabolic alkalosis.3,4 A positive Trousseau sign is seen in 1%-4% of healthy people.1 The sensitivity of the sign is not known, but the sign can be absent in patients with definite hypocalcemia.
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