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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (adenoma)
21,222 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of primary hyperparathyroidism and coincidental Cushing's syndrome of hypothalamic-hypophyseal origin is reported. The hyperparathyroidism was based on an adenoma of the parathyroid glands and produced a severe hypercalcaemia (4.5 mmol/l) and calcinosis of kidneys and lungs. The Cushing's syndrome was caused by a hyperplasiogenic ACTH cell-adenoma of the pituitary which had induced a regulative hyperplasia of the ACTH-dependent zones of the adrenal cortex. The ultrastructure of the zona fasciculata and reticularis showed a conspicuous activation of the steroid hormone-producing organelles. The two endocrine diseases added together in skeleton, heart, duodenum, and pancreas. As a sign of hyperparathyroidism the osteoclastic absorption of the bone was strongly increased, whereas the bone formation was reduced due to the hypercortisolism. The pancreas showed a severe acute recurrence of chronic pancreatitis which was induced by a parathyrotoxic crisis. This was the immediate cause of death.
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PMID:[Simultaneous occurrence of primary hyperparathyroidism and pituitary Cushing's syndrome (author's transl)]. 19 Dec 34

A patient with a huge mediastinal parathyroid adenoma had an acute hypercalcemic crisis. The patient exemplifies the many pitfalls in diagnosis and management of this unusual complication. Postoperatively the patient further developed severe calciphylaxis with calcinosis cutis and systemic and pulmonary calcinosis, a most rare condition.
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PMID:Acute hyperparathyroidism with systemic calcinosis. Report of a case. 291 40

Three hundred and eighteen cases of functioning and non-functioning pituitary adenoma were examined by histological, immunocytochemical and electronmicroscopic technique. Fourty-four of them (13.8%) showed evidence of calcospherites in the tumor tissues. A high incidence of calcospherite is found in functioning adenoma, but not in non-functioning adenoma. Calcification was seen most frequently in cases of prolactinoma (23), GH secreting (7), or GH + PRL tumor (2) and less in adrenocorticotropic hormone secreting adenoma (2) and follicle stimulating hormone secreting adenoma (1). Prolactin and growth hormone might be involved in the control of calcium metabolism. This is because, following adenomectomy in patients with prolactinoma or GH-secreting adenoma with hypercalcemia, there is normalization of serum PRL and GH with reduction in serum calcium. Calcospherite is produced in all of metastatic calcification, arterial calcification, dystrophic calcification and calcinosis. In cases of non-functioning adenoma however, the mechanism is believed to by dystrophic calcification.
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PMID:[Pituitary adenoma calcification]. 302 53

Parathyroid allotransplantation was performed in a 25-year-old woman with idiopathic hypoparathyroidism that had been diagnosed at age 4 years. Long-term medical management of the primary condition with vitamin D and oral calcium supplementation was complicated by multiorgan calcinosis and renal failure. At the age of 21 years she received a successful cadaver renal allograft. Four years later she developed calcinosis cutis with widespread skin necrosis. Medical control of calcium and phosphate metabolism was unsatisfactory and the skin necrosis became progressive and life threatening. A parathyroid allograft that was performed with tissue from a parathyroid adenoma resulted in normalization of the serum calcium and phosphorus levels with arrest and subsequent healing of the skin necrosis. Later failure of the parathyroid allograft was followed by successful retransplantation of normal parathyroid tissue from a cadaver organ donor.
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PMID:Parathyroid allotransplantation in the treatment of complicated idiopathic primary hypoparathyroidism. 407 84

A noninvasive method for the diagnosis of cardiac calcinosis, a life-threatening complication in hemodialysis patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), has not, as yet, been firmly established. We tested whether whole body scanning with 99m-technetium methylene diphosphonate (MDP) might visualize cardiac calcinosis. In 19 consecutive chronic hemodialysis ESRD patients (13 males and 6 females, aged 40-81, mean 63 +/- 8 years) with cardiovascular disease [mitral annular calcinosis and/or calcified aortic valve (n = 4), hemodialysis cardiomyopathy (n = 1), coronary artery disease (n = 9) and peripheral artery atherosclerotic disease (n = 6)], MDP uptake in the heart was compared to that in 7 non-ESRD controls with hyperparathyroidism due to adenoma. Cardiac and lung field MDP uptake was confirmed in only 3 (16%) and 5 (26%) of the 19 ESRD subjects, respectively, but was absent in controls. Positive cardiac uptake was related to cardiac calcified complications (mobile intracardiac calcinosis, myocardial calcinosis and mitral annular calcification) and the duration of hemodialysis (p = 0.015). While it was statistically insignificant, subjects showing MDP uptake were elder and had higher serum Ca or Ca x P product and lower intact parathyroid hormone levels. These results suggest that cardiac calcinosis in ESRD patients can be detected noninvasively by myocardial scintigraphy with 99m-technetium MDP.
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PMID:Detection of cardiac calcinosis in hemodialysis patients by whole-body scintigraphy with 99m-technetium methylene diphosphonate. 1097 Sep 80

Four dogs diagnosed as pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism were treated with transsphenoidal hypophysectomy and postoperative hormone supplementation therapy. On histological examination of the resected tissues, the tumors were ACTH-producing adenoma of the anterior lobe. Clinical signs such as alopecia and calcinosis cutis, as well as endocrinological abnormalities, were markedly alleviated after surgery. The clinical courses of these 4 dogs suggest that transsphenoidal hypophysectomy may be a useful treatment for pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism.
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PMID:Transsphenoidal hypophysectomy for four dogs with pituitary ACTH-producing adenoma. 1293 8

Disorders of calcium-phosphate-parathormone balance, are very important issues in ESRD patients, that may lead to severe complications, as dystrophic calcinosis cutis, a rare disease, caused by calcium salt deposits in cutaneous or subcutaneous tissues and many organs. We present the case of a 47 years old woman, in ESRD due to membranous glomerulopathy, treated by peritoneal dialysis, who, after 7 months of dialysis, developed painful masses on second finger and fifth metacarpus of the right hand. Laboratory and instrumental data showed hyperparathyroidism with a parathyroid mass consistent with adenoma. Increasing of therapy with phosphate binders and cinacalcet only, was not effective to solve cutaneous masses, that were biopsied. Histological exam revealed deposition of amorphic material with calcific component, consistent with cutaneous dystrophic calcinosis. We further increased dialysis and therapy and we observed complete regression of masses in 2 months.
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PMID:[Dystrophic Calcinosis Cutis: a rare fearsome issue of Chronic Kidney Disease]. 2939 Feb 41