Electrolyte Imbalance in Renal Disease · NCLEX Exam

What is the underlying reason for a patient with CKD having low serum calcium and elevated PTH (secondary hyperparathyroidism)?

  1. Excess active vitamin D produced by the kidneys
  2. Phosphate retention with reduced vitamin D activation
  3. Over-secretion of calcitonin from the thyroid
  4. Increased gastrointestinal calcium absorption
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Correct answer: Phosphate retention with reduced vitamin D activation

Retained phosphate binds calcium causing hypocalcemia and kidneys cannot activate vitamin D—leading to increased PTH (secondary hyperparathyroidism).

Difficulty: Medium Question 13 of 20

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