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)

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

In 20 haemodialyzed patients operated on account of HPT, in 12 instances total PTE was performed with autotransplantation of portions of the parathyroid gland and in 8 patients so-called partial PTE was performed, leaving one parathyroid gland (in one instance two). Histomorphological examination revealed diffuse to nodular hyperplasia and twice an adenoma of the parathyroid; the mean weight of the excised tissue was 4000 mg. The follow-up period after operation varied from two months to 36 months. After total PTE the regression of HPT is more marked and more rapid. Possible relapses are more probable after partial PTE, also the possible development of hyperplasia of the implanted tissue cannot be ruled out. A new rise of C-HPT levels precedes changes of the clinical picture and a rise of indicators of bone metabolism. From linear correlations between serum levels of the ALP bone fraction, total ACP, free OH-P and values of C-PTH (p less than 0.01-0.001) conclusions can be drawn on regression or progress of the osseous finding after PTE. Data on the possible participation of aluminum osteopathy are essential, as in the florid stage it is a contraindication of PTE. The positive effect of operation recorded in 17 patients comprised not only restoration of a satisfactory mobility but also an improved mental condition. Surgical treatment of advanced forms of HPT in dialyzed patients is therefore still considered an indicated operation, provided these patients receive subsequently further aimed care.
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PMID:[Personal experience with surgical treatment of hyperparathyroidism in chronic kidney failure. II. Surgical technic, postoperative course and the state of bone metabolism after parathyroidectomy]. 276 32

Since August 1978, the neck of 68 patients with the clinical diagnosis of hyperparathyroidism was examined by ultrasound. The accuracy of the method increased from 61% during the first period of investigation to 82% using a newly-developed ultrasound scanner. These results are comparable with those obtained by invasive methods like angiography or selective venous blood sampling for the assay of parathyroid hormone. Positive preoperative localization of enlarged parathyroid glands confirmed the diagnosis of HPT. Cases involving acute HPT preoperative localization of enlarged parathyroid glands requires prompt surgical management. Preoperative localization of an adenoma allows direct removal of the enlarged gland and exploration of the others within the immediate section from microscopic examination under surgery.
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PMID:[Preoperative ultrasonic diagnosis and localization of enlarged parathyroid glands in suspected hyperparathyroidism]. 724 56

Controlled studies in 1990-1992 with Danish, Sardinian, and Hongkong-Chinese patients consistently revealed a prevalence of goiter of about 50% in lithium treated patients. This is far beyond the frequency generally assumed for Germany, the whole country still known to be an endemic goiter area. Hypothyroidism as a side effect of lithium occurs in a clearly different group of patients and is much less frequent, the overall incidence being not substantially different from the incidence in the general population. But the risk of becoming hypothyroid as well as hyperparathyroid during lithium prophylaxis is markedly higher in women over 45 years of age, who in the general population are also prone to both endocrine dysfunctions. Lithium is considered to have a provoking role. Lithium is known to be accumulated in the bone and an impact on bone metabolism was shown in animal studies. The data reviewed prohibit the use of lithium during lactation and enforce strict indication in children. In adults the effect of lithium on bone should be considered only in osteomalacia and severe osteoporosis. This review is illustrated by the case of a 60-year-old woman, who after 4 years of successful treatment with lithiumcarbonate because of schizoaffective psychosis, developed a syndrome of hypercalcemia. Exstirpation of a parathyroid adenoma rendered her normocalcemic. Moreover, a pre-existing diffuse goiter had grown to a large nodular goiter within the course of her 5-year treatment. As she finally became paraparetic, she was admitted to our rehabilitation center for the diseases of the spinal cord. Her paraparesis may have been caused not only by the lithium-induced primary HPT, but in part by lithium itself. There are a few reports on lithium causing peripheral neuropathy at toxic levels. A transient deterioration of a pre-existing neuropathy, as in our case study, may have happened at lithium serum levels not far beyond the upper limit of 0.8 mmol/l.
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PMID:[Lithium and its effects on the endocrine system, bones and peripheral nerves--a current review]. 775 53

The high-resolution appearance of enlarged parathyroid glands is well known. Thus, real-time gray-scale US alone fails to provide, in ENT surgery, adequate sensitivity and specificity rates to differentiate between parathyroid glands, hypoechoic thyroid adenomas and other hypoechoic neck masses. Since parathyroid tissue, in both normal and enlarged glands, is hypervascular, color-Doppler US is used as a sort of non-invasive angiography to identify parathyroid glands. The combined use of B-mode and color-Doppler US allows the vascular features of thyroid masses to be satisfactorily demonstrated, with easy differentiation between enlarged parathyroid glands, featuring diffuse internal vascularization, and thyroid adenomas characterized by rounded peripheral vessels and also lymph nodes and cysts exhibiting different vascular patterns. We studied 25 patients with clinical and biochemical signs of hyperparathyroidism (19 primary and 6 secondary) submitted to surgery in the last 20 months. Every patient was scanned with both B-mode and color-Doppler US. At surgery, 19 parathyroid adenomas were found--16 of them correctly identified preoperatively with color-Doppler US and 3 false negatives (retrotracheal glands). Moreover, 1 false positive was observed due to a small Plummer's adenoma misdiagnosed as an intrathyroid parathyroid adenoma: both lesions had the same vascular pattern on US images. Sensitivity was 84.5% and specificity 93.7%. In secondary HPT patients, 23 hyperplastic glands were found at surgery--21 of them correctly identified preoperatively by color-Doppler US, with 2 false negatives. No false positive was found. Sensitivity was 87.5% and specificity 100%. Sensitivity does not differ very much from what reported in literature. Specificity is clearly increased by the use of color-Doppler US. The possible source of error represented by Plummer's adenomas lead us to investigate pulsed Doppler capabilities in differentiating Plummer's adenomas from PT glands, since color-Doppler findings were similar in the two conditions. Peak velocities recorded with both color and pulsed Doppler showed velocity to range 6 to 40 cm/s in parathyroid glands (mean +/- SD: 14.6 +/- 11.7) and 38 to 120 cm/s in thyrotoxic nodules (mean +/- SD: 78.4 +/- 23). The statistical analysis of the results showed a highly significant difference between the two groups of velocities. Peak velocities as recorded in the main, vessels of the parathyroid glands with color and pulsed Doppler were correlated with the activity of the parathyroid glands.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Clinical applications of color-Doppler: the parathyroid glands]. 833 86

Polymorphisms in the vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene have been hypothezised to interfere with VDR expression. VDR alleles (Bb, Aa and Tt) were examined in 254 Caucasian patients with sporadic primary hyperparathyroidism (spHPT, n = 206), HPT of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN-1; n = 17), and HPT of uremia (n = 31). In comparison to age- and sex-matched controls, the b, a and T alleles were overrepresented in 100 menopausal females with spHPT (p = 0.006-0.0004), equivalent to an odds ratio of 2.6-3.4 for spHPT in homozygotes for the b, a and, T alleles. The association between VDR genotypes and spHPT was restricted to female patients and those with parathyroid adenoma (p = 0.0006-0.0001), whereas HPT of MEN 1 and uremia seemed unrelated to the VDR polymorphisms (p = 0.26-0.96). The results suggest that the VDR alleles b, a, and T are novel risk factors in the essentially uncharacterized pathogenesis of spHPT.
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PMID:Vitamin D receptor alleles b, a, and T: risk factors for sporadic primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) but not HPT of uremia or MEN 1. 907 Feb 72

Surgery for symptomatic hyperparathyroidism remains the standard therapy. Asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) is being diagnosed with increasing frequency owing to broad serum testing. Indications for surgery in this setting are controversial. For evaluation of surgical safety we performed a retrospective analysis of our patients who were being operated on for asymptomatic pHPT. From January 1988 until August 1995, 243 patients were treated for pHPT and registered prospectively at our unit. Seventy-six patients were classified as asymptomatic. In all, 75% of the patients were female; the mean age was 62 years. In this group, 87% of the patients had cervical sonography in order to localize the adenoma. Highly selective venous catheterization was required in cervical reexplorations. Statistical analysis for potential prognostic factors for the clinical outcome was performed. Successful cervical exploration was possible in 71 patients (94.7%). With 4 patients remaining hypercalcemic, the rate of persistency was 5.2%. Localization procedures were correct in 58% for cervical ultrasound and 77% for selective venous catheterization. Postoperative morbidity included one permanent recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy and 2 patients with hemorrhage who were treated by reoperation. While one case of permanent hypoparathyroidism was well controlled by oral supplementation, 18 patients recovered from temporary hypoparathyroidism. No postoperative mortality occurred. Risk factor analysis revealed only cervical reexplorations for HPT to be associated with a higher morbidity (P = 0.02). Surgery for asymptomatic pHPT can be performed with reasonable safety. Cervical reexplorations in asymptomatic patients should be reserved for special indications. Apart from this small group, all patients should be evaluated for surgery.
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PMID:[Outcome of surgical therapy in asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism]. 915 80

Clonal analysis has shown that in renal hyperparathyroidism (2-HPT), parathyroid glands initially grow diffusely and polyclonally after which the foci of nodular hyperplasia are transformed to monoclonal neoplasia. There is a great deal of information about genetic abnormalities contributing to the tumourigenesis of parathyroid neoplasia in primary hyperparathyroidism. It is speculated that allelic loss of the MEN1 suppressor gene and overexpression of cyclin D1 induced by rearrangement of the parathyroid hormone gene may be the major genetic abnormality in sporadic parathyroid adenoma but not in 2-HPT. The pathogenesis of 2-HPT, abnormality of the Ca2+-sensing receptor (CaR) gene and the vitamin D receptor gene may possibly contribute to parathyroid tumourigenesis in 2-HPT. However, this is not yet clear and heterogeneous and multiple genetic abnormalities may be responsible for the progression of secondary parathyroid hyperplasia.
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PMID:Mechanism of parathyroid tumourigenesis in uraemia. 1004 55

The primitive hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) constitutes still cause of discussion both from the diagnostic point of view and from the therapeutic one although surgical successes are generally reported. Between the most important problems there is the increase of the HPT asymptomatic or oligosymptomatic patients with the decisional difficulties in the timing of the surgical treatment and the difficult framing of the HLP disease associated with MEA and the relating surgical failures. Besides some authors support an unilateral dissection of the neck in patients with adenoma diseases diagnosed before the intervention against the traditional address of a bilateral exploration. Our experience is based on 31 patients subjected to intervention of parathyroidectomy for primitive HPT: 26 carriers of adenomas, of which 1 double, and 5 of diffused hyperplasia. We have effected 25 simple parathyroidectomy for adenoma, 1 resection of three parathyroid glands for double adenoma, 2 subtotal parathyroidectomy (7/8) for diffused hyperplasia. 2 patients had new surgical treatment for persistent hypercalcemia, and they were respectively carriers: 1 of a second ectopic adenoma and 1 of asymmetrical hyperplasia; 2 patients finally, operated in other hospitals had a second exploration and they were affected from MLP. In 26 patients we had very good results, in 2 persistence of hypercalcemia (patients who had a second look) and 3 hypocalcemia.
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PMID:[The surgical treatment of primary hyperparathyroidism: clinical experience]. 1080 73

Thyroid imaging approach is based on the preliminary clinical evaluation. Lesions that are smaller than 2 cm should be assessed with US, which is capable of discriminating masses as small as 2 mm and distinguishing solid from cystic nodules. US-guided FNAB provides tissue for cytologic examination of thyroid nodules. CT and MR imaging are indicated for larger tumors (greater than 3 cm diameter) that extend outside the gland to adjoining structures, including the mediastinum, and retropharyngeal region. Metastatic lymph nodes in the neck and invasion of the aerodigestive tract are also in the realm of CT and MR imaging. Thyroid nodules are categorized on scintigraphy as hot or cold nodules. Hot nodules are rarely malignant, whereas cold nodules have an incidence of 10% to 20% of malignancy. Calcifications (amorphous, globular, nodular, and linear) occur in adenomas and carcinomas and have no differential diagnostic features except for psammomatous calcifications, which are a pathognomonic finding in papillary carcinomas and a small percentage of medullary carcinomas. Papillary carcinoma is the most common malignant tumor (80%) followed by follicular (20% to 25%); medullary (5%); undifferentiated; anaplastic carcinomas (< 5%); lymphoma (5%); and metastases. Lymph node metastases are common in papillary carcinoma, 50% at presentation, and less common in follicular carcinomas. The metastatic nodes in papillary carcinoma may enhance markedly (hypervascular); show increased signal intensity on T1-weighted images (increased thyroglobulin content or hemorrhage); and reveal punctate calcifications. Localized invasion of the larynx, trachea, and esophagus occurs predominantly in papillary and follicular carcinomas; the incidence is less than 5%. Ectopic thyroid tissue may be encountered in the tongue (foramen cecum); along the midline between posterior tongue and isthmus of thyroid gland; lateral neck; mediastinum; and oral cavity. Goiter and malignant tumors, notably papillary carcinoma, may develop in ectopic thyroid tissue. Carcinomas may also arise in thyroglossal duct cysts, which develop from duct remnants between the foramen cecum and thyroid isthmus. Infectious disease of the thyroid gland is not common and the CT and MR imaging findings are similar as described under neck infection. Other types of inflammatory disorders including Hashimoto's thyroiditis, granulomatous thyroiditis, and Riedel's struma display no specific imaging features. Imaging studies may, however, be indicated to confirm a suspected clinical diagnosis and assess compromise of the airway (Riedel's struma). HPT is a clinical diagnosis in which hypercalcemia is the most important finding. Parathyroid hyperplasia, adenoma, and carcinoma represent underlying lesions. To relieve the patient's symptoms surgical extirpation is indicated. The surgical success rate without imaging is 95%. The indications for imaging studies vary but it is generally agreed that reoperation after a previous failed surgical attempt and suspicion of an ectopic parathyroid adenoma should be investigated by imaging. These consist of US, nuclear medicine studies, CT and MR imaging. US and technetium sestamibi scanning have the highest accuracy rate for localizing an adenomatous gland at and near the thyroid gland. Ectopic adenomas, particularly if they are located in the mediastinum, are preferrably investigated with CT and MR imaging with gadolinium and fat suppression. Carcinomas and parathyroid cysts are optimally evaluated by CT and MR imaging. On MR imaging adenomas are low in signal intensity on T1-weighted images, high in signal intensity on T2-weighted images, and enhance post introduction of gadolinium.
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PMID:The thyroid and parathyroid glands. CT and MR imaging and correlation with pathology and clinical findings. 1105 72


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