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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (
adenoma
)
21,222
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Parathyroid adenomas account for most cases of primary hyperparathyroidism (1 degrees
HPT
). Certain symptoms and biochemical abnormalities alert the surgeon to their presence, since these benign tumors are rarely evident on physical examination. Moreover, because they are usually very small, preoperative localization using sestamibi scanning or ultrasonography is required to avoid bilateral neck exploration. Parathyroid adenomas rarely attain huge proportions. We report a case of a parathyroid
adenoma
measuring 8 x 5 x 3.5 cm and weighing 110 g; to our knowledge the greatest mass reported in the literature. Interestingly, despite its huge size it did not cause many of the hypercalcemic symptoms usually associated with larger adenomas, but rather it manifested with symptoms of local pressure, another unusual property of this atypical tumor.
...
PMID:Unusual presentation of a giant parathyroid adenoma: report of a case. 1577 95
We reported here the data on minimally invasive radio-guided parathyroidectomy (MIRP) in a large group of 253 patients enrolled from the whole series of 355 consecutive patients affected by primary hyperparathyroidism (P-HPT) referred to our center. On the basis of preoperative imaging including Sestamibi scintigraphy and neck ultrasound (US), 263 patients (74% of the whole series) with evidence of a solitary parathyroid
adenoma
(PA) and a normal thyroid gland were addressed to MIRP and in 253 (96%) of them this minimally invasive neck exploration was successfully performed. The MIRP protocol developed in our center consisted of a very low 1 mCi Sestamibi injection in the operating room a few minutes before the start of intervention, thus minimizing the radiation exposure dose to the patient and personnel. No major intraoperative complication was recorded in patients treated by MIRP and only a transient hypocalcemia in 8.5% of cases. The mean duration time for MIRP was 35 min and the mean hospital stay 1.2 days. Local anesthesia was also performed in 62 patients, 54 of whom were elderly patients with concomitant invalidating diseases contraindicating general anesthesia. No
HPT
relapse was observed during subsequent follow-up. The gamma probe was used also during bilateral neck exploration in the group of 92 patients excluded from MIRP. The most frequent cause of exclusion from MIRP in our series was the presence of concomitant Sestamibi avid thyroid nodules (68.5% of cases) that can give false positive results at radio-guided surgery. In conclusion, MIRP is an effective treatment in patients with a high likelihood of a solitary PA and a normal thyroid gland at scintigraphy and US so that an accurate preoperative localizing imaging is required for MIRP. A low 1 mCi Sestamibi dose appears sufficient to perform MIRP. Patients with concomitant Sestamibi avid thyroid nodules should be excluded from MIRP.
...
PMID:Minimally invasive radio-guided parathyroidectomy. 1652 90
Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN2) is an hereditary disease with a prevalence of 1/5000. Three phenotypic variants have been identified: MEN2A associates medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) to pheochromocytoma in about 20-50% of cases and to primary hyperparathyroidism in 5-20% of cases; MEN2B associates MTC to pheochromocytoma in 50% of cases, to marphanoid habitus and to mucosal and digestive ganglioneuromatosis whereas in familial isolated medullary thyroid carcinoma (FMTC), the other components of the disease are absent. In MEN2, natural history of the disease and a common embryologic origin (neural crest) may explain the phenotypes observed in the organ involved, beginning from the stage of hyperplasia to
adenoma
and cancer. MEN2 is an inherited autosomal dominant disease with a complete penetrance, related to germline mutation in the proto-oncogene RET. MTC represent the most frequent circumstance of diagnosis. Pheochromocytoma and
HPT
may reveal the disease unfrequently and are systematically associated to undiagnosed MTC which is present yet. Analysis of the RET gene allows to confirm the diagnosis of MEN2 by identifying the causal germline mutation. Management of MEN2 patients include thyroidectomy associated to cervical central and bilateral lymph nodes dissection for MTC, unilateral adrenalectomy for unilateral pheochromocytoma or bilateral adrenalectomy when both glands are involved, and selective resection of pathologic parathyroid glands for
HPT
. Familial genetic screening detects at risk subjects who will develop the disease and allows to manage them at the earliest stage of the disease by perform early or prophylactic thyroidectomy such giving them the best chance of cure. Prognosis of MEN2 is mainly related to the stage-dependant prognosis of MTC, thus pointing the necessity of a complete thyroid surgery for index cases with MTC and the earliest thyroidectomy for screened at risk subjects.
...
PMID:[Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2]. 1762 79
Nephrogenic systemic fibrosis (NSF) is a rare disorder in patients with chronic kidney disease characterized by an increased tissue deposition of collagen. Its pathogenesis remains unclear. Prior studies indirectly suggested a possible impact of chronic inflammation and accelerated atherosclerosis--a common feature in kidney diseased patients--whereas recent data focused almost exclusively on gadolinium (Gd)-based MR contrast agents. Usually NSF develops a maximum of 2-3 months after Gd. Longer intervals have not yet been described. Therefore, we present the first case with an extraordinary long time course in terms of chronic inflammation. A 52-year-old Caucasian woman with end-stage renal disease was admitted to our hospital with progressive muscle weakness and skin induration resulting in growing immobility. Her past medical history revealed a secondary
HPT
, multiple vascular complications, a seronegative rheumatoid arthritis, and a pituitary gland
adenoma
. The latter conditions led to multiple MR examinations with Gd-based contrast agents, the last one more than 4 years ago. Numerous laboratory tests were performed including ESR, CRP, intact parathyroid hormone (iPTH), serum ferritin, cyclic-citrullinated peptide antibodies (CCP), ANA, ANCA, immunoelectrophoresis, and serology for hepatitis as well as human immunodeficiency virus. Eventually a skin biopsy of her left thigh was obtained. The laboratory investigation showed persistently elevated levels of CRP, ESR, serum ferritin, and iPTH, whereas all other parameters were inconspicuous. The hisology displayed typical signs of nephrogenic systemic fibrosis. NSF can occur at any time after Gd exposure in the long term. Gd is a necessary, but not the sole cause of NSF. Certain other cofactors such as chronic inflammation and accelerated atherosclerosis seem to be involved.
...
PMID:Chronic inflammation and accelerated atherosclerosis as important cofactors in nephrogenic systemic fibrosis following intravenous gadolinium exposure. 1855 Dec 45
CDC73 (HRPT2) germline mutations are responsible for more than half of cases of hyperparathyroidism-jaw tumor syndrome (HPT-JT) and for a subset of familial isolated
HPT
(FIHP). We performed a clinical, genetic, and histopathologic study in three unrelated Italian kindreds with HPT-JT and FIHP. We identified three germline inactivating mutations of the CDC73 gene in the probands and affected patients of the three kindreds, but also in some asymptomatic subjects. HPT-JT and FIHP patients had similar laboratory, clinical, and demographic features and shared primary
HPT
and other neoplasms, the most common of which was uterine polyposis. Genetic analysis of tumor samples demonstrated a second somatic CDC73 mutation only in a parathyroid
adenoma
and no cases with the loss of the wild-type allele or methylation of the CDC73 promoter, even though immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated the loss of nuclear parafibromin expression in all tumors, including a uterine polyp. In conclusion, our results indicate that FIHP and HPT-JT associated with CDC73 mutations do not have distinct clinical, genetic, and histopathologic features, but may represent variants of the same genetic disease. This study also confirms that uterine involvement represents a clinical manifestation of the syndrome.
...
PMID:Clinical, genetic, and histopathologic investigation of CDC73-related familial hyperparathyroidism. 1875 53
The pathogenesis of primary hyperparathyroidism (I degrees -
HPT
) and secondary hyperparathyroidism (II degrees -
HPT
) remains to be elucidated. To characterize their pathophysiology, we investigated the effects of calcium and phosphate on cell proliferation and PTH release in an organ culture of parathyroid tissues. Dissected parathyroid tissues obtained from patients with I degrees -
HPT
(
adenoma
) or II degrees -
HPT
(nodular hyperplasia) were precultured on a collagen-coated membrane for 1-4 week. After changing the medium for one containing various concentrations of phosphate, PTH release and [(3)H]thymidine incorporation were studied. In contrast to dispersed parathyroid cells cultured in a monolayer, calcium decreased PTH release in a concentration-dependent manner in parathyroid tissues. Furthermore, when parathyroid tissues obtained from II degrees -
HPT
were precultured for 1-4 weeks, PTH release and parathyroid cell proliferation were significantly increased in high-phosphate medium. These phosphate effects were also observed to a lesser extent in parathyroid tissues obtained from I degrees -
HPT
, but there was no significant difference between I degrees -
HPT
and II degrees -
HPT
. Microarray analyses revealed that mRNA levels of PTH, CaSR, and VDR were well preserved, and several growth factors (e.g. TGF-beta1-induced protein) were abundantly expressed in II degrees -
HPT
. Using organ cultures of hyperparathyroid tissues, in which PTH release and CaSR are well preserved for a prolonged period, we have demonstrated that phosphate stimulates parathyroid cell proliferation not only in II degrees -
HPT
but also in I degrees -
HPT
. Although the mechanism responsible for phosphate-induced cell proliferation remains to be elucidated, our in vitro findings suggest that both parathyroid tissues preserve to some extent a physiological response system to hyperphosphatemia as observed in normal parathyroid cells.
...
PMID:Stimulating parathyroid cell proliferation and PTH release with phosphate in organ cultures obtained from patients with primary and secondary hyperparathyroidism for a prolonged period. 1919 73
In patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT), positive preoperative localization studies enable to perform a minimally invasive approach for parathyroid surgery. However, current imaging techniques are not always successful. We therefore conducted a study to determine the sensitivity of C-11 methionine positron emission tomography/computed tomography (Met-PET/CT) in localizing parathyroid adenomas in pHPT. Met-PET/CT scans of the neck and mediastinum of 33 patients undergoing parathyroidectomy for primary
HPT
were compared with intraoperative and histological findings. Primary
HPT
was caused by a single gland
adenoma
in 30 patients, while another 3 patients had multiglandular disease. Met-PET/CT scan correctly located a single gland
adenoma
in 25 out of 30 (83%) patients with pHPT, among them 2 patients with persistent disease, 7 patients with prior neck surgery, and 8 patients with concomitant thyroid nodules. In 3 patients with multiglandular disease, Met-PET/CT showed only one enlarged parathyroid gland in two individuals and was negative in the third patient. Statistical analysis found a significant correlation between true-positive results and the weight (2.42+/-4.05 g) and diameter (2.0+/-1.18 cm) of parathyroid adenomas while the subgroup with false negative findings had significantly smaller (0.98+/-0.54 cm) and lighter (0.5+/-0.38 g) glands. Sensitivity was 83% for single gland adenomas and 67% for multiglandular disease. Met-PET/CT correctly localized 83% of single gland parathyroid adenomas in patients with pHPT. However, preoperative localization of multiglandular disease due to double adenomas or parathyroid hyperplasia remained difficult.
...
PMID:C-11 methionine positron emission tomography/computed tomography localizes parathyroid adenomas in primary hyperparathyroidism. 2001 49
Although parathyroidectomy remains the only curative approach to most primary hyperparathyroidism cases, medical treatment with cinacalcet HCl has been proven to be a reasonable alternative for several patient subgroups. Cinacalcet almost always controls hypercalcemia and hypophosphatemia sufficiently. PTH levels are lowered, and cognitive parameters improve. While an increase in bone mineral density DEXA scan scores was not demonstrated in cinacalcet trials, the same applies to more than half of patients after parathyroidectomy. Medical therapy should be first choice in patients with hyperplasia in all glands rather than an isolated
adenoma
(10-15%), patients with persisting
HPT
following unsuccessful surgery or inoperable cases due to comorbidities, and patients detected in lab screens for hypercalcemia before developing symptoms who should be treated early but are usually reluctant to undergo surgery. Nephrolithiasis was not found to occur more frequently in cinacalcet trial groups, but urine calcium excretion as one major risk factor of this complication of primary
HPT
may increase on cinacalcet. Patients carrying the rs1042636 polymorphism of the calcium-sensing receptor gene respond more sensitively to cinacalcet and have a higher risk of calcium stone formation. Cinacalcet is usually administered twice daily but three or four doses per day should be discussed to mimic the beneficial pulsatile PTH-pattern.
...
PMID:Cinacalcet treatment of primary hyperparathyroidism. 2146 94
Recurrence of secondary hyperparathyroidism (rSHPT) in patients after total parathyroidectomy (TPTX) with autotransplantation (AT) represents a major diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. The aim of this retrospective cohort study was to evaluate rSHPT in patients after TPTX with AT and the subsequent surgical treatment. 112 patients with secondary hyperparathyroidism (surgery 1998-2008) were evaluated. In 16 patients, rSHPT was detected, while all of them had been originally operated with TPTX, cervical thymectomy and AT. The recurrence rate of TPTX with AT in our patient cohort was 14.2% (16/112). All the 16 patients with rSHPT suffered from forearm-autotransplant(s) hyperparathyroidism (AT-HPT). AT-
HPT
was diagnosed after a median of 5.6 years (1.5-11 years). All "forearm" AT-
HPT
operations were performed using the method of intra-operative parathyroid-hormone measurement. The histopathologic result showed hyperplasia or an
adenoma
of the reimplanted parathyroid gland (PTG) particles. The parathyroid hormone measurement (PTH) showed normal values in all cases 2 weeks after surgery. In none of the patients persistent hypocalcemia was observed. Our data demonstrates that the high rate of rSHPT in patients after TPTX with AT with renal-insufficiency represents an unsolved problem, often leading to re-operation including possible morbidity. Although we are not showing direct data, we propose, that the alternative method of TPTX without AT, simultaneous cryopreservation and potential metachronous reimplantation could offer an excellent alternative. However, this therapy option needs to be validated in further clinical trials.
...
PMID:Recurrence of secondary hyperparathyroidism in patients after total parathyroidectomy with autotransplantation: technical and therapeutic aspects. 2199 52
Primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) is characterized by an increase in the levels of PTH and Ca, or one of these (Ca, PTH) as a result of a dysregulation of calcium (Ca) metabolism due to inappropriate excess parathyroid hormone (PTH) autonomously produced from one or more than one parathyroid glands. Ninety to 95% of pHPT is a sporadic type, which is not associated with the familial history and other endocrine organ tumors, and 5-10% of it is hereditary. While 80-85% of pHPT arises from a single parathyroid
adenoma
, 4-5% is caused by a double
adenoma
, 10-15% by multigland hyperplasia and less than 1% by parathyroid cancer. The diagnosis of pHPT is reached biochemically. The only curative treatment of pHPT is surgery. The choice of surgery in pHPT may vary depending on whether the patient has hereditary
HPT
or thyroid disease requiring surgical treatment, preoperative localization studies and the findings in these studies, the possibilities of using intraoperative PTH and the preference of the surgeon. The preoperatively determined surgical strategy can be revised according to intraoperative findings in case of need to achieve excellent results. The two main approaches in the surgical treatment of pHPT are BNE (bilateral neck exploration) and MIP (minimal invasive parathyroidectomy). Although BNE is a consistently valid option that has excellent results in the surgical treatment of pHPT and is considered the gold standard, MIP is the ideal approach in selected patients with clinically and radiologically considered a single-gland disease. Negative imaging is not a contraindication for parathyroid surgery and is not a criterion for the presence or absence of surgical indication. Although both methods are safe and effective in the surgical treatment of sporadic pHPT, there is still controversy regarding the effectiveness of both methods. Surgical intervention should establish the risk-benefit balance well, minimize the risk of persistent and recurrent disease and provide the highest cure rate without increasing the risk of complications. Complication rates are higher in the secondary surgery, thus in secondary procedures, selective surgery should be performed under guidance of an imaging modality. The surgical strategy should be determined to achieve maximum cure with minimum dissection and minimal morbidity. In this study, we aimed to determine the type of surgical treatment and pHPT patients suitable for the surgical treatment.
...
PMID:Surgical Treatment of Primary Hyperparathyroidism: Which Therapy to Whom? 3237 85
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