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Query: UMLS:C0005940 (bone disease)
7,459 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Primary hyperparathyroidism was thought 30 years ago to be a rare disease, and the diagnosis was most often made in patients presenting with either bone disease or kidney stones. Today the minority of patients with hyperparathyroidism present with such symptoms, a fact accounted for by the introduction into general medical practice three decades ago of laboratory technology for efficiently determining the serum concentrations of various blood minerals, including calcium. Hypercalcemia was detected more frequently, and it was realized that most patients with hyperparathyroidism either had minor symptoms, such as constipation, polyuria, tiredness, and muscle weakness, or they were "asymptomatic" and indistinguishable from normal subjects. It was thought that primary hyperparathyroidism was a progressive disease and that sooner or later all patients would become symptomatic and require parathyroidectomy. Since this operation was curative in a high percentage of cases, it was recommended for virtually all patients once the diagnosis was established. In this contribution the long-term benefits of parathyroidectomy in patients with and without symptoms from primary hyperparathyroidism are reviewed. It is concluded that a multicenter prospective randomized trial is needed to resolve the indications for operative and nonoperative management of patients with this disease.
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PMID:Surgical therapy of patients with primary hyperparathyroidism: long-term benefits. 176 66

Over the last 25 years, the perceived clinical spectrum of primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) has changed dramatically from a disorder characterized by severe bone and renal disease to one typically manifested by few or mild symptoms and little evidence of organ damage. Reasons for this change in spectrum include changing demographics (primary HPT is primarily a disease of the middle-aged and elderly), diffusion of medical knowledge leading to a higher index of suspicion, and improved clinical laboratory technology (especially inexpensive and accurate determination of serum calcium and parathyroid hormone). In the first 343 cases of primary HPT seen at the Massachusetts General Hospital, 57% had renal stones, 23% had hyperparathyroid bone disease, and less than 1% had no symptoms. By contrast, studies dating from the availability of automated serum calcium measurement found renal stones and hyperparathyroid bone disease in less than 5% of cases, and about half of cases had few or no symptoms. Most patients with primary HPT today have mild, nonspecific symptoms, such as weakness, fatigue, and mental depression, and such signs as arterial hypertension and osteopenia, and detection of their hypercalcemia is generally serendipitous. The mildness and slow progression seen in many cases of primary HPT has resulted in much controversy about appropriate management.
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PMID:Clinical spectrum of primary hyperparathyroidism: evolution with changes in medical practice and technology. 176 71

This study comprised 100 white patients with primary hyperparathyroidism treated between 1975 and 1984. Of these, 75 attended Johannesburg Hospital and 25 were managed by private practitioners. The mean age was 56.4 +/- 1.4 years at the time of diagnosis. There were almost twice as many women as men. In patients attending Johannesburg Hospital there was a progressive increase in the detection rate after 1979, which corresponded with the introduction of automated multichannel serum analysis. The commonest major complications were renal stones (54%), renal insufficiency (27%), a history of skeletal fractures (12%), radiographic evidence of osteopenia (38%) and peptic ulcers (20%). Bone disease was particularly common in postmenopausal women (64%). Other notable features were the frequency of weakness and fatigue (40%) and hypertension (45%). Coincidental thyroid abnormalities were frequent (18%). Ninety-three patients were treated surgically; 76 (81.7%) had a single adenoma. Our findings are compared with those of other large series. This study indicates the need for a greater awareness of this condition and earlier diagnosis to forestall the development of its harmful complications, and for the collection of additional information from a prospective study.
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PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism. A study of 100 patients in Johannesburg. 394 58

This multicenter collaborative study was undertaken to review the types and complications of femoral neck fractures in children. It is a retrospective clinical and radiological review of 108 femoral neck fractures. Cases originated from four different pediatric hospitals. All the patients had plain radiographs. Fractures occurred at all ages (one day to 18 years), and 63% of the patients were boys. Forty-nine fractures were traumatic; 37 were pathologic, 19 were insufficiency fractures; and three were fatigue fractures. Unless the underlying bone was abnormal, significant high velocity trauma, fall from a height or other severe violence was required to fracture the femoral neck. A unicameral bone cyst was the underlying lesion in 40% of pathologic femoral neck fractures and malignancy in 35%. Osteoporosis as in myelodysplasia, osteogenesis imperfecta and from other causes was responsible for 52% of insufficiency fractures. Because of the unique osseous and vascular anatomy of the femoral head and neck in the growing child, these fractures have a high incidence of complications. Complications included avascular necrosis 13%, premature closure of the epiphyseal plate 12%, varus deformity 8.3%, and nonunion 3.7%. Unless there is a clear history of significant violence, a cause for a femoral neck fracture should be sought, e.g. an underlying bone lesion or a metabolic bone disease. These fractures are rare, but are serious injuries since their complications may lead to a life-long disability.
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PMID:Types and complications of femoral neck fractures in children. 825 40

We present the clinical and radiological features of two children with fatigue fractures of the sacrum. Both patients were active, had no underlying bone disease and presented with insidious onset of low back pain. Plain radiography was non-contributory to the diagnosis. In both patients a focal area of increased activity was present in the lateral aspect of the sacrum on bone scintigraphy, which corresponded to linear medullary sclerosis in the sacral ala demonstrated by computed tomography. Magnetic resonance imaging in one patient revealed a linear signal void in the sacral ala on T1- and T2-weighted images. This was surrounded by diffuse low marrow signal on T1-weighted images, and increased marrow signal on T2-weighted images. Fatigue fractures of the sacrum should be considered in the differential diagnosis of low back pain in children. An awareness of their appearance on magnetic resonance imaging is important as this modality is increasingly utilised, particularly in children.
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PMID:Fatigue fractures of the sacrum in children: two case reports and a review of the literature. 827 88

A 57-yr-old man presented with a long history of undiagnosed fatigue but no evidence of bone disease. He was noted to have hypophosphatemia due to an idiopathic phosphaturia. Marked abnormalities of exercising skeletal muscle detected by phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy and by plasma metabolite measurements were consistent with mitochondrial dysfunction. Oral phosphate supplements restored plasma phosphate concentration and muscle biochemistry to normal and produced considerable improvement in symptoms and exercise tolerance, although the phosphate concentration in muscle was only marginally low and increased little by treatment. We conclude that hypophosphatemia should be excluded in unexplained fatigue.
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PMID:Oral phosphate supplements reverse skeletal muscle abnormalities in a case of chronic fatigue with idiopathic renal hypophosphatemia. 801 97

I received that wanted, needed, and feared telephone call. I wanted it for the freedom and hope it might bring. I needed it because of bone disease and fatigue. I feared it because of the surgery, possible complications, and the possibility of the most damning word for any transplant patient--rejection.
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PMID:First-hand experience: a transplant recipient's story. 850 88

Many studies document bone loss at diagnosis in patients with PHPT (including mild PHPT) that is greater than would be expected in comparable persons without this condition. However, there is no general agreement regarding the severity of bone mass loss in these patients and the rate at which it progresses. A few studies suggest that such accelerated osteoporosis may be self-limited, with patients showing no further decline in BMD after diagnosis. There is insufficient evidence to conclude that PTH-related bone loss is associated with an increased risk of fracture. The few studies that have evaluated the risk of fracture in these patients are conflicting. Some evidence also suggest that, like bone loss in these patients, fracture risk may change during the course of the disease. One study found that patients with PHPT (including those with mild hypercalcemia) were more likely than matched controls to have a history of fractures prior to diagnosis, but that both groups had similar rates of fractures during followup. Moreover, the studies of fractures suffer from several limitations, such as nonrandomization of patients, different definitions of vertebral fractures, small study populations, and short followup times. There is also insufficient evidence to determine the effect of parathyroidectomy on the incidence of fractures in patients with mild PHPT, partly because the natural history of this condition is incompletely understood. Although studies demonstrate that patients with PHPT gain bone mass following parathyroidectomy, the bone reparation is incomplete and bone mass density remains below normal, even though the hyperparathyroidism is cured. Currently, decisions to perform parathyroidectomy are based on signs and symptoms of bone disease, metabolically active renal stones, decreased renal function, fatigue and/or depression, and high levels of serum calcium. Although the use of bone mass measurements has been advocated to aid clinical decisions regarding the risks and benefits of surgery, specific bone changes that indicate the need for parathyroidectomy have not been clearly established. There are virtually no prospective data that evaluate decisions to operate based upon bone mass measurements nor randomized clinical trials comparing the outcome of surgically treated patients with those who have not had surgery. Based on the literature, bone mass measurements cannot predict who among asymptomatic patients will require parathyroidectomy. There is some evidence that nonsurgically treated patients and those who remained hypercalcemic after unsuccessful surgery lost bone at the same percentage rate as normal control subjects.
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PMID:Bone densitometry: patients with asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism part I. Technical report. 893 32

Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) is likely an autoimmune disease that destroys the interlobular bile ducts. Although the term PBC implies cirrhosis, this is not always present. The condition may be entirely silent clinically, save for the hallmark mitochondrial antibodies in serum. The clinical spectrum of PBC ranges from asymptomatic anicteric cholestasis with or without extrahepatic manifestations to severe cholestasis with decompensated cirrhosis. It is uncertain whether or not the course of this disease is universally fatal. Currently, no specific features have been identified which predict progression from asymptomatic to symptomatic disease, although once hyperbilirubinemia is present, a rising level indicates a poor prognosis. The liver-specific complications include pruritus, abdominal pain, xantholasma, and portal hypertension. The latter is often an early feature, as the portal hypertension is presinusoidal in nature and, when present, does not always reflect the presence of cirrhosis. There are many extrahepatic features of PBC, the most common being metabolic, chiefly hypothyroidism and metabolic bone disease. Other common associations are rheumatologic, renal, pulmonary, neuromuscular, and dermatologic. The non-specific yet distressing symptom of fatigue affects up to two-thirds of PBC subjects, but its etiology remains obscure.
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PMID:The clinical expression of primary biliary cirrhosis. 908 8

Although the incidence of hyperparathyroidism (HPT) in the elderly exceeds 1.5%, limited resources and co-morbidity inhibit referral for parathyroidectomy. To determine the risks and benefits of surgery, we examined the outcomes of elderly patients who underwent exploration for primary HPT. Data from 211 consecutive patients who underwent parathyroidectomy by one surgeon at the Johns Hopkins Hospital between August 1990 and May 1996 were recorded prospectively. Of these patients, 184 had primary HPT. Demographic and outcome data of elderly patients (> 70 years of age) (n = 36) were compared to those from younger patients (< 70 years of age) (n = 148). Preoperative symptoms of mental impairment, bone disease, and fatigue were more common in elderly patients (p < 0.05), and nephrolithiasis was more frequent in younger patients (p < 0.025). Elderly patients presented with more advanced disease, manifested by higher preoperative parathyroid hormone levels (301.9 +/- 63.3 vs. 169.2 +/- 14.3 pg/ml, p < 0.05). The cure rate (94.4%), morbidity (5.5%), and mortality (0%) in the elderly were indistinguishable from those of their younger cohorts (98%, 1.4%, and 0%, respectively). In conclusion, the more advanced disease seen in the elderly suggests that they are referred for surgery with a higher threshold than younger patients. Although several series of parathyroidectomy in elderly patients have reported high morbidity rates, significant mortality, and long length of stay (LOS), we found that parathyroidectomy in these patients can be performed with high cures, low morbidity, no mortality, short LOS, and high patient satisfaction. These data suggest that the benefits of surgery outweigh its risks and argue for a lower threshold for referral of elderly patients with primary HPT for surgical treatment.
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PMID:Parathyroidectomy in the elderly: do the benefits outweigh the risks? 959 24


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