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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (
adenoma
)
21,222
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We reported a case of sporadic
multiple endocrine neoplasia
type 1, with multiple insulinoma, parathyroid
adenoma
, and pituitary tumor. Measurement of hormone contents and immunohistochemical studies of the pancreatic tumors showed that the tumors contained insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, and pancreatic polypeptide. Furthermore, the concentrations of these hormones were different in each tumor. Insulin extracted from the pancreatic tumors analyzed by reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography revealed no structural abnormalities. On the other hand, in gel filtration evaluation of the extract of the parathyroid
adenoma
, it was found that the tumor extract contained a macromolecular parathyroid hormone (molecular weight 20,000 to 25,000).
...
PMID:A case of multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) type 1; the immunohistochemical and ultrastructural studies of its tumors and the analysis of hormones in tumor extracts. 256 30
The clinical features of 20 patients from five families with
multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome
type I (MEN-I) were studied. Nineteen patients (95%) had hyperparathyroidism. Five patients who had a diagnosis during surgery of
adenoma
and who had fewer than 3.5 glands removed had recurrence of hypercalcemia after surgery. Fourteen patients (70%) had pancreatic islet cell tumors. All had one or more elevated serum polypeptide hormones, and six had symptoms related to the hormones produced. Multiple pancreatic tumors were identified in the nine patients who underwent surgery. Three patients who died had a mean survival of 6.3 +/- 2.9 years. Eight patients had pituitary tumors; seven had macroadenomas. Of the eight patients with pituitary tumors, seven had high serum prolactin and responded to bromocriptine therapy, whereas the eighth patient had acromegaly treated with radiotherapy. It was concluded that hypercalcemia due to hyperparathyroidism in
MEN
-I syndrome patients should be managed by a resection of four glands and transplantation of one half gland into the forearm because none of the patients has shown evidence of a recurrence, and serum calcium levels have been normal. Pancreatic tumors, which are usually multiple, may be asymptomatic. Patients with these tumors usually have long survival rates, even with distant metastasis. Total pancreatectomy may be the method of choice, especially in patients with gastrinoma caused by the diffuse nature of the disease. Long-term follow-up is needed, however, with more patients. Pituitary tumors are primarily prolactin-producing tumors, and medical treatment is the method of choice.
...
PMID:Multiple endocrine syndrome type I. Clinical, laboratory findings, and management in five families. 256 65
Familial
multiple endocrine neoplasia
type 1 (MEN-1) is characterized by tumors of the parathyroids, endocrine pancreas, and anterior pituitary. Since the gene associated with
MEN
-1, located on chromosome 11 (11q13), may normally inhibit tumor proliferation, tumors could arise from inactivation of one or both of the alleles. However, parathyroid tumors in patients with
MEN
-1 have been considered to result from polyclonal hyperplasia. Using genetic probes, we tested parathyroid tumors for a monoclonal component, represented by a loss of alleles at any of eight loci along chromosome 11. Ten of 16 tumors from 14 patients with familial
MEN
-1 had losses of alleles from chromosome 11. Tumors with losses were larger than those without (1.6 vs. 0.2 g; P less than 0.002), suggesting that a monoclonal
adenoma
may develop after a phase of polyclonal hyperplasia. In 7 of 10 tumors, the subregion of loss was less than the full length of chromosome 11 but always included one copy of the
MEN
-1 locus. Of 34 sporadic adenomas from patients without
MEN
-1, 9 showed similar allelic losses in chromosome 11; in 7 the losses included the apparent
MEN
-1 locus. We conclude that many "hyperplastic" parathyroid tumors in familial
MEN
-1 are in fact monoclonal and may progress or even begin to develop by inactivation of the
MEN
-1 gene (at 11q13) in a precursor cell. Some sporadic adenomas have allelic losses on chromosome 11, which may also involve the
MEN
-1 gene.
...
PMID:Clonality of parathyroid tumors in familial multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1. 256 86
We sought an explanation for prior findings of high plasma chromogranin-A (Chr-A) in primary hyperparathyroidism. Chr-A was measured in plasma samples from 55 controls and 73 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism caused by
adenoma
(n = 14), sporadic or familial hyperplasia (n = 10), or familial
multiple endocrine neoplasia
type 1 (FMEN1; n = 49). Serum or plasma samples were also tested for calcium, PTH, gastrin, pancreatic polypeptide, CG alpha, and PRL. Plasma Chr-A was 34 +/- 10 in parathyroid
adenoma
, 55 +/- 33 in parathyroid hyperplasia without FMEN1, 63 +/- 88 in FMEN1, and 25 +/- 8 in controls (mean +/- SD; nanograms per ml; FMEN1 or parathyroid hyperplasia vs. control, P less than 0.05). Plasma Chr-A did not correlate with other hormonal variables in controls. Plasma Chr-A correlated with log serum gastrin (r = 0.43; P = 0.003) and plasma PTH (r = 0.52; P less than 0.05) only in FMEN1. In FMEN1, plasma Chr-A was highest in subjects with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES, 120 +/- 127; no ZES, 30 +/- 33 (P less than 0.0001). Parathyroidectomy did not decrease plasma Chr-A in patients with parathyroid
adenoma
or parathyroid hyperplasia. For FMEN1 patients with available pre- and postparathyroidectomy samples, Chr-A decreased postoperatively in four of five patients with ZES compared to none of six patients without ZES (P less than 0.05). Elevated plasma Chr-A is not a general feature of primary hyperparathyroidism. Elevated plasma Chr-A in primary hyperparathyroidism was restricted principally to patients who also had ZES. Primary hyperparathyroidism may influence the level of Chr-A by an effect of hypercalcemia or elevated PTH on Chr-A secretion from pancreatic islet tissue.
...
PMID:Plasma chromogranin-A in primary hyperparathyroidism. 257 19
High-resolution, real-time sonography can be used to assess the size and location of the parathyroid glands. The authors review the types of information provided by sonography and outline the ways in which it contributes to the management of primary hyperparathyroidism. Sonography usually can differentiate parathyroid
adenoma
from hyperplasia. In milder cases, with less parathyroid enlargement, this differentiation is difficult but can be facilitated by determining three dimensions for each gland. Preoperative knowledge of the presumptive location of an
adenoma
is most useful when the strategy of unilateral neck exploration is to be used because it will allow the exploration always to begin on the correct side. Sonographic evidence of hyperplasia should trigger a preoperative search for
multiple endocrine neoplasia
and will alert the surgeon that a bilateral neck exploration and thymectomy will be needed. A more universal benefit is the ability to predict or exclude intrathyroidal and subcapsular parathyroid tumors, thus guiding the decision for thyroid versus thymic exploration in the event of a missing abnormal gland. Sonography often fails to visualize parathyroid tumors in an ectopic position away from the thyroid bed. Such tumors, however, may be anticipated when the sonogram shows only three enlarged glands in cases of hyperplasia, or only three glands of normal size in a patient with strong biochemical evidence of hyperparathyroidism. Because it is noninvasive and inexpensive and can provide a wealth of information, the authors have adopted sonography as a routine preoperative procedure for primary hyperparathyroidism.
...
PMID:The role of parathyroid ultrasonography in the management of primary hyperparathyroidism. 266 86
Primary hyperparathyroidism is a common disorder and one that can usually (approximately 95%) be successfully treated by parathyroidectomy. PTH assays have become quite accurate for confirming the diagnosis. In patients with malignancy-associated hypercalcemia, parathyroid-like protein levels are usually increased, and radioimmunoassays being developed to quantitate serum levels of this protein will make the diagnosis easier. Treatment for a parathyroid
adenoma
is removal of the tumor and identification of the normal parathyroid glands. Treatment for primary or secondary hyperplasia is usually subtotal parathyroidectomy. Recurrent hyperparathyroidism is uncommon, except in patients with familial hyperparathyroidism,
MEN
-1 parathyroid carcinoma, or renal failure and secondary hyperparathyroidism. Persistent hyperparathyroidism is more common and is usually due to surgeon inexperience, but it is also caused by ectopically situated parathyroid glands, multiple abnormal parathyroid glands, or supranumerary parathyroid glands. Preoperative localization studies using ultrasound, thallium-technetium scanning, MRI, or CT scanning are reliable in patients with solitary parathyroid adenomas, but often fail to detect all of the abnormal parathyroid tissue in patients with multiple abnormal parathyroid glands. Intraoperative use of urinary cyclic AMP assays and rapid PTH assays have recently been used experimentally during parathyroid explorations to determine whether all hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue has been removed, but these methods are not yet reliable or fast enough to be generally accepted. Most patients with primary hyperparathyroidism who are successfully treated by parathyroidectomy experience psychological, clinical, and metabolic benefits.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism. A surgical perspective. 267 68
A case of a pituitary prolactinoma, pancreatic glucagonoma, and an aldosterone-producing adrenal cortical
adenoma
coexisting in a 65-year-old man is reported. This case may represent a sporadic variant of the
multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome
type I first manifested by hyperaldosteronism.
...
PMID:Pituitary prolactinoma, pancreatic glucagonomas, and aldosterone-producing adrenal cortical adenoma: a suggested variant of multiple endocrine neoplasia type I. 282 31
We have extended our study of an incomplete variant of
multiple endocrine neoplasia
Type I (
MEN
IBurin). In this syndrome, primary hyperparathyroidism and prolactin-secreting
adenoma
are common, with hormone-secreting pancreatic tumors being rarely seen. The recent localization of the prolactin structural gene to chromosome 6 made further investigation of linkage to HLA of particular interest. Results in 2 multigeneration families exclude close linkage to HLA. We cannot at this time draw any inference regarding linkage of
MEN
IBurin to the prolactin structural gene.
...
PMID:Variant multiple endocrine neoplasia I (MEN IBurin): further studies and non-linkage to HLA. 285 81
Serum calcium levels were analyzed after one or more explorations for primary hyperparathyroidism in familial
multiple endocrine neoplasia
type I. These data covered all 85 operations (performed in many hospitals) on 61 of 62 members from 14 kindreds. After 61 initial operations, there were high rates of persistent or recurrent hypercalcemia (54 percent) and chronic hypocalcemia (10 percent). These rates contrast with lower postoperative rates of hypercalcemia (4 to 16 percent) or chronic hypocalcemia (1 to 8 percent) in large series of primary hyperparathyroidism. Persistent or recurrent hypercalcemia after initial exploration decreased only modestly in patients who underwent surgery after 1975 versus before 1975 (46 versus 63 percent). The rate for long-term remission of hypercalcemia after initial parathyroidectomy was higher after a diagnosis of parathyroid hyperplasia was made (as opposed to
adenoma
) (57 versus 30 percent, p less than 0.05) and after removal of three or more glands (as opposed to removal of two and a half or less) (70 versus 34 percent, p less than 0.01). Following 24 reoperations, there were also high rates of persistent or recurrent hypercalcemia (46 percent) and chronic hypocalcemia (25 percent). After surgery in unselected patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, recurrent hypercalcemia (as opposed to persistent hypercalcemia) is distinctly uncommon; however, it was frequent in familial
multiple endocrine neoplasia
type I, with total recurrences increasing from 21 percent at five years to 41 percent at 10 years in patients who showed a normocalcemic interval after surgery. The data indicate that the occurrence of persistent or recurrent hypercalcemia after parathyroidectomy in familial
multiple endocrine neoplasia
type I remains frequent. Although recurrent hypercalcemia may be characteristic of the response to any technique of parathyroidectomy in familial
multiple endocrine neoplasia
type I and not preventable, persistent hypercalcemia can be decreased by preoperative recognition of the specific familial cause, involvement of an experienced surgical team, and histologic confirmation of the identification of three or more parathyroid glands.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism in familial multiple endocrine neoplasia type I. Long-term follow-up of serum calcium levels after parathyroidectomy. 285 57
Multiple endocrine neoplasia
(
MEN
) is rare. We report two cases of type I and type IIb
MEN
. A 41-year-old female visited our clinic with a complaint of spontaneous discharge of urinary stones. Right lobe of the thyroid had been resected in previous operation for cancer. She was diagnosed to have hyperparathyroidism from hypercalcemia, hypophosphatemia and a small tumor in the neck. Left upper parathyroid and a lymphnode beside the left lower part of the thyroid were extirpated. Pathological examination revealed the former as
adenoma
and the later as metastasis of thyroid cancer. Since multiple pancreatic tumors and pituitary tumor were later detected, she was diagnosed to have type I
MEN
. Recently, her serum calcium level again elevated. A 27-year-old male visited our clinic with complaints of multiple tongue tumors, malfanoid habitus and characteristic facies, such as lip hypertrophy, everted eyelids and prognathism. This characteristic subjective picture made type IIb
MEN
doubtful. Medullary thyroid cancer was discovered, but pheochromocytomas could not be found.
...
PMID:[Multiple endocrine neoplasia, type I and type II B: report of two cases]. 286 71
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