Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (adenoma)
21,222 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. The parathyroid hormone-like biological activity of concentrated urine was measured by the increase of plasma calcium concentration after intravenous injection of the sample into chickens. 2. Urine was tested in hypoparathyroid patients, normal volunteer subjects, primary hyperparathyroid patients before and after surgery and patients with secondary hyperparathyroidism. 3. In primary and secondary hyperparathyroidism the biological activity was significantly higher than in urine from normal subjects, which was in turn significantly higher than the activity in the urine of hypoparathyroid patients. This bioactivity diminished after surgical removal of a hyperparathyroid adenoma. 4. Decreased activity after trypsinization indicated the peptidic nature of the hypercalcaemic substance.
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PMID:Parathyroid hormone-like biological activity in urine. 63 65

Over a 25-year period, two carcinomas of the parathyroid were observed in 67 cases of primary hyperparathyroidism. The most important signs and symptoms were bone disease, palpable neck metastases, renal stones, and hypercalceamia with high blood levels of parathyroid hormone. Histology revealed that in principle parathyroid carcinoma can be distinguished from adenoma by a trabecular pattern and thick fibrous bands. The presence of cellular atypia and variation or mitotic figures (regressive polymorphia) was not a useful criteria for carcinoma. Local recurrence occurred in both cases.
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PMID:[Parathyroid neoplasm associated with hyperparathyroidism]. 68 29

The results of parathyroid arteriography and venous parathyroid hormone assay were evaluated in thirteen patients reexplored for persistent or recurrent hyperparathyroidism. The operative findings in these patients were ten adenomas and eight hyperplastic parathyroid glands. Angiography disclosed eight of the adenomas and failed to visualize one. Only two of the hyperplastic glands were disclosed by angiography. By venous sampling the correct side was predicted in seven out of eight cases of unilateral lesions--in one case of an adenoma no hormonal maximum was found. In two cases of bilateral lesions a maximum was found on one side only, while in three cases of unilateral two-lesions the maximum was correct in two cases and contralateral in one. We conclude that a combination of angiography and venous sampling gave localization or lateralisation in 12/13 patients with previous neck surgery for hyperparathyroidism and found the methods to be complementary to each other and prefer both done in these cases.
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PMID:Parathyroid localization in patients with previous neck surgery. 74 63

Plasma glucose, insulin, and alpha-cell glucagon profiles were examined in ten adults with uncomplicated primary hyperparathyroidism before and 8-12 week after surgical removal of a single parathyroid adenoma. Treatment restored abnormal serum calcium and phosphorus concentrations to a normal range and reduced serum parathyroid hormone levels from 47 +/- 4 to 16 +/- 4 mu 1 Eq/ml (normal = 0-40). Plasma glucose curves during 100-g oral glucose tolerance, 30 min intravenous glucose (1.5 g/min), or arginine infusions (1.0 g/min) did not differ before and after surgery. However, basal and peak insulin concentrations were higher before treatment during these tests (p less than 0.05). Basal glucagon levels were unaffected by hyperparathyroidism (72 +/- 7 versus 77 +/- 7 pg/ml). Peak 30 min values after arginine provocation were also similar before and after treatment as was maximal suppression of basal glucagon during glucose infusions. Four patients also received 400 g lean beef meals. Glucose and glucagon responses over 240-min periods were nearly identical before and after surgery despite higher insulin levels before treatment. It is concluded that elevated serum parathyroid hormone and plasma insulin concentrations in primary hyperparathyroidism do not relate to abnormalities of plasma alpha-cell glucagon in the basal state or after glucose, arginine, or protein administration.
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PMID:Plasma alpha-cell glucagon in primary hyperparathyroidism. 78 68

The effect of somatostatin on plasma parathyroid hormone (PTH) was studied in 6 subjects with normal parathyroid function and one patient with a parathyroid adenoma. In 5 subjects, including the one with the parathyroid adenoma, plasma PTH was measured by radioimmunoassay during a 4-hour infusion of somatostatin (500 mug/h). In 2 subjects, PTH responses to EDTA were compared with those observed during a simultaneous infusion of somatostatin and EDTA. In no instance was ther a discernible effect of the somatostatin infusion on plasma PTH. These results demonstrate that somatostatin does not suppress plasma PTH.
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PMID:Somatostatin does not suppress plasma parathyroid hormone. 82 Jul 4

Experience in the surgical management of a series of 65 cases with hyperparathyroidism is described (primary HPT: 55, secondary HPT: 3, tertiary HPT: 2, malignant HPT: 5) The consecutive forms of primary HPT, i.e. quarternary or quinternary HPT, and of secondary HPT, i.e. tertiary HPT, are discussed in more detail. Dystopic location was observed in 12.3%. In 4.6% no adenoma was found during the operation. A modern method for the localisation is the measurement of parathyroid hormone levels by radioimmunoassay. In nearly all publications we observe an increase in the renal forms. Intensive search for primary HPT is essential in all cases with recurrent renal calculi.
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PMID:[Parathyroid adenoma from the surgical view point. Report of 65 cases]. 82 94

Several laboratory parameters have been followed before and after surgery in a 69-year-old woman with parathyroid adenoma and severe skeletal involvement. High preoperative levels of immunoreactive parathyroid hormone rapidly decreased postoperatively, accompanied by a similar fall in the peptide-bound hydroxyproline (HP) excretion in the urine. Renal clearance of free HP was high both pre- and postoperatively, probably because of renal damage associated with the disease. The high serum alkaline phosphatase levels increased slightly after the operation. The patient developed severe postoperative hypocalcaemia, and prolonged calcium supplement therapy was necessary. The results imply a clear correlation between the changes in Ca homeostasis and the breakdown rate of bone collagenous matrix. Postoperative hypocalcaemia was mainly due to the rapid change in the rates of bone formation and destruction.
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PMID:Bone, calcium, and hydroxyproline metabolism in hyperparathyroidism and after removal of parathyroid adenoma. 89 81

In 82 patients, a preoperative diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism has been established by means of transfemoral neck vein catheterization and measurement of serum immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH). Twenty-five of these patients have had cancer in other parts of the body but with no evidence of recurrence or metastasis. One patient had carcinoma of the colon with metastases, and four were members of families with multiple endocrine adenomatosis (MEA, Types I and II). In six other hypercalcemic patients, high levels of iPTH were found also in the effluent blood from cancer sites other than the parathyroid gland, secondary to ectopic hormone production or pseudohyperparathyroidism. In addition, a high serum level of iPTH was found in the superior vena cava of a seventh patient who had carcinoma of the breast but no clinical or radiological signs of recurrence or metastasis with the exception of an enlarged liver. This iPTH finding was interpreted as being, probably, the result of parathyroid adenoma in either the neck or the mediastinum. At the time of operation, a transcervical mediastinal search was made. Four normal cervical parathyroid glands were found; three were removed. Hypercalcemia persisted after operation, and the patient died. At postmortem examination, microscopic study revealed that the disease had metastasized to lungs and hilar lymph nodes. There was massive metastasis in the liver; the liver contained a large amount of iPTH. The results of these investigations suggest that (1) venous catheterization of the neck veins and the effluent blood from extraparathyroid tumors aid in identifying and localizing iPTH production; (2) primary benign hyperparathyroidism is not uncommon in patients with cancer, and its co-existence must be recognized; (3) high serum iPTH level in the superior vena cava may be found in patients with metastatic or primary cancer of the thoracic cavity; and (4) hyperparathyroidism may be the first hint of a familial multiple endocrine syndrome.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia in patients with known malignent disease. 96 5

Six patients with primary hyperparathyroidism were studied during the first seven days after the operative removal of the parathyroid adenoma with special emphasis on biochemical and hormonal changes during the first 24 h. Serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels fell abruptly after the parathyroidectomy and normalized within 3 h. The half-life of the biologically inert c-terminal PTH-fragment (M.W. 7000-7500) was calculated to be about 180 min. No significant changes in serum calcitonin levels were found. The serum phosphorus levels, which were already low pre-operatively, decreased transiently but significantly during the first 90 min after the removal of the parathyroid adenoma. This fall in serum phosphorus preceded a slow decrease of the calcaemia. During the first post-operative week the calcaemia continued to decline, while serum phosphorus levels increased. The pre-operative cholesterol levels were low compared to age-paired normal Belgians. During the first post-operative week the cholesterolaemia decreased even more, whereas at long term follow-up a clearcut increase of the serum cholesterol levels has to be expected.
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PMID:Hormonal and biochemical changes in patients successfully operated for primary hyperparathyroidism. 98 97

A case of primary hyperparathyroidism is described that presented unusual features. The patient had been treated previously for squamous cell carcinoma of the lung and therefore it was necessary to exclude ectopic hyperparathyroidism. The results of the tests generally used to distinguish primary from ectopic hyperparathyroidism-the serum chloride level, the serum calcium response to cortisone suppression and the absence of residual or recurrent tumour-suggested that the patient did have the primary form of the disorder. Exploration of the neck revealed no parathyroid tumour or hyperplasia, and the mediastinal parathyroid adenoma was localized only by determination of parathyroid hormone in the venous drainage from the neck and mediastinum.
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PMID:Hyperparathyroidism-an unusual case. 112 Feb 96


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