## Correct Answer: D. Half fall in 10 min The Miami criteria is the intraoperative PTH monitoring standard used during parathyroid surgery to confirm successful removal of hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue. The criterion specifies that PTH must fall by **at least 50% (half) from the baseline value within 10 minutes** after removal of the abnormal gland. This 10-minute window is critical because it allows sufficient time for PTH clearance from the circulation (PTH has a half-life of ~3–4 minutes) while remaining practical for intraoperative decision-making. A >50% drop within 10 minutes indicates that the primary source of PTH hypersecretion has been removed, confirming adequate surgery. If PTH does not meet this criterion, the surgeon must explore for additional hyperfunctioning glands (multiglandular disease) or re-examine the removed specimen. This intraoperative monitoring has dramatically reduced the need for postoperative imaging and reoperation in primary hyperparathyroidism, making it a cornerstone of modern parathyroid surgery in Indian tertiary centers. The criterion was established at the University of Miami and is now the gold standard endorsed by international endocrine surgery guidelines. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Half fall in 5 min** — While a 50% fall is correct, the 5-minute window is too short. PTH clearance kinetics require approximately 10 minutes for reliable assessment. A 5-minute criterion would result in false negatives (inadequate glands appearing successful) because PTH levels may not have equilibrated sufficiently, leading to unnecessary reoperation or missed multiglandular disease. **B. Quarter fall in 5 min** — This combines two errors: a 25% fall is insufficient to confirm successful parathyroidectomy (too lenient), and 5 minutes is too short for PTH kinetics. This criterion would accept inadequately treated hyperparathyroidism, leaving residual disease undetected intraoperatively and requiring reoperation postoperatively. **C. Quarter fall in 10 min** — Although the 10-minute timeframe is correct, a 25% fall is inadequate. The Miami criteria specifically requires ≥50% reduction to confidently exclude multiglandular disease. A quarter fall would miss cases of double adenoma or hyperplasia, resulting in persistent hyperparathyroidism and need for revision surgery. ## High-Yield Facts - **Miami criteria**: PTH must fall ≥50% from baseline within 10 minutes of abnormal gland removal during parathyroid surgery. - **PTH half-life** is 3–4 minutes; the 10-minute window allows two half-lives for reliable clearance kinetics. - **Failure to meet Miami criteria** mandates intraoperative exploration for multiglandular disease (double adenoma, hyperplasia, or ectopic gland). - **Intraoperative PTH monitoring** reduces postoperative persistent hyperparathyroidism rate from ~15% (without monitoring) to <5% in Indian tertiary centers. - **Baseline PTH** must be drawn before any gland manipulation; a second sample is drawn 10 minutes after suspected abnormal gland removal. ## Mnemonics **Miami = 50% in 10** Miami criteria = 50% drop in 10 minutes. Remember: 'Miami' sounds like 'My-Half' (50%) and '10' is the time window. Use this when deciding intraoperatively whether to close or explore further. **PTH Clearance Rule** PTH half-life ~3–4 min → 10 min = ~2 half-lives → 75% clearance expected. The Miami 50% threshold is conservative, ensuring true gland removal, not just transient PTH suppression. ## NBE Trap NBE often tests whether candidates confuse the percentage drop (50% vs 25%) or the time window (5 min vs 10 min) independently. The trap is pairing the correct percentage with wrong time or vice versa, exploiting partial knowledge of PTH kinetics without understanding the complete Miami criterion. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian practice, intraoperative PTH monitoring has become standard at AIIMS and major endocrine centers, reducing the need for bilateral neck exploration and postoperative imaging. A surgeon who fails to meet Miami criteria intraoperatively must immediately search for a second gland or ectopic location (mediastinum, thymic horn) rather than closing and risking reoperation—a costly scenario in resource-limited settings. _Reference: Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery (Parathyroid Surgery chapter); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine Ch. 402 (Hyperparathyroidism)_
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