Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (hypercalcemia)
10,293 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A link between hyperparathyroidism and the growth of hematopoietic stem cells is suggested by this report of a parathyroid carcinoma with polycythemia vera. A 56-year-old white woman presented with splenomegaly, a palpable neck mass and hypercalcemia, recurrent six years after resection of a parathyroid tumor. She had pancytosis with a subnormal serum concentration of erythropoietin. Radiographs showed subperiosteal erosions an dosteopenia. Nephrocalcinosis was absent. Bone biopsy showed a decreased cortical width with many intracortical osteoclasts. The cancellous bone area remained normal, but the osteoid area/bone area, osteoblast perimeter and osteoclast perimeter were increased. At surgery, a parathyroid carcinoma was found in the same location operated on previously. As in two other reported cases, postoperative improvement in the hypercalcemia was associated with remission of the blood dyscrasia. A novel finding in this case is that when the hypercalcemia eventually recurred, it was again accompanied by pancytosis. With bisphosphonate therapy, the serum intact parathyroid hormone level increased in response to a decrease in the ionized calcium level, indicating that the cancer was not autonomous. This case suggests that in the presence of the ionized hypercalcemia, the parathyroid tumor may have produced or induced production of a growth factor that can stimulate pancytosis. The differential diagnosis of polycythemia and hypercalcemia should be expanded to include parathyroid tumors in addition to hepatic, adrenal, renal, and ovarian neoplasms.
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PMID:Parathyroid carcinoma associated with polycythemia vera. 179 72

It is generally accepted that some patients affected by mild asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism need not be treated with surgery, but may be medically managed without risk. However, our experience regarding 5 of these cases observed in the last two years, suggests a different approach. These patients, initially diagnosed as having mild hyperparathyroidism based on only moderately elevated serum concentrations of calcium and followed medically for years, were referred to us for a sudden worsening of their clinical course. One 35-year-old man presented hemorrhagic gastritis with severe anemia and type II AV block with syncopal attacks. Three women, aged 51, 64 and 65 years, presented with severe hypercalcemia associated with renal failure in two and with marked bone disease in another. In all these cases parathyroid neoplasms were preoperatively localized (by ultrasonography, CT scan and radioactive 201-Tl 99-Tc scan) and surgically removed. Histological examination showed a parathyroid carcinoma in the male patient and single gland enlargements in the three females. A fifth patient, a 65-year-old woman, was referred to us in critical condition: severe hypercalcemia, osteopenia with femur fracture, myocardial infarction and renal failure. She died in a few days, in spite of intensive medical care. These cases suggest that patients with hyperparathyroidism initially diagnosed as "mild" need close medical observation and preferably, in our opinion, should undergo surgery.
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PMID:Acute complications in the course of "mild" hyperparathyroidism. 180 15

A patient with chronic T-cell leukemia characterized by a suppressor phenotype is reported. A 71-year-old woman presented with symptoms and signs of hypercalcemia. Peripheral blood specimen showed abnormal lymphoid cells with an oval to cleaved nucleus, rather condensed chromatin, occasional prominent nucleolus, and basophilic cytoplasms with vacuoles which seems to be a T-cell counterpart of B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia with mixed cell types. The phenotype of these cells was CD4-, CD8+, CD5+, CD6+ with poor expression of CD3, CD7, and CD25. Southern blot analysis of T-cell receptor beta-chain gene revealed one allele rearranged band. The serum antibodies were positive against human T-cell leukemia virus, type I-associated antigens, but monoclonal integration of proviral DNA was not detected in the leukemic cells suggesting that she was just a carrier of this virus. Interestingly, serum PTH-related peptide (PRP) was elevated. The combination therapy with vincristine and prednisolone for leukemia decreased not only the number of leukemic cells but also the serum PRP levels. The clinical course was aggressive. She only responded transiently to treatments, and died of renal failure due to uncontrollable hypercalcemia six weeks after admission.
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PMID:A patient of CD4-/CD8+ chronic T-cell leukemia associated with hypercalcemia. 182 9

We describe the case of a 48 year old Indian female with hypercalcemia due to tuberculosis. She presented with symptoms of hypercalcemia and chest radiographs showed bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy with normal lung fields. The diagnosis of tuberculosis was made histologically from biopsy of the enlarged hilar nodes. Her hypercalcemia resolved following one month of anti-tuberculous treatment. The prevalence of hypercalcemia in tuberculosis has been reported to be high in western series. There is, however, a paucity of local data on the subject. The presence of 1-alpha-hydroxylase-like activity in pulmonary alveolar macrophages with resulting increased formation of active vitamin D metabolites is the postulated mechanism of tuberculosis associated hypercalcemia.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia in a patient with tuberculous mediastinal lymphadenopathy. 201 16

A 60-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with symmetrical arthritis of the knees. During the 2 years preceding admission, she had experienced recurrent arthritis. A histological examination of her synovial tissue showed prominent villous proliferation of the synovial cells, prominent vascularity throughout and an inflammatory infiltrate composed of abnormal mononuclear cells. Three months later, she developed fever, skin eruptions, lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly. She also had hypercalcemia and there was abnormal lymphocytosis in her blood smears. She was diagnosed as having adult T cell leukemia. Parenteral chemotherapy treatment with adriamycin and cyclophosphamide gave remission of all the manifestations of disease, including arthritis. Her leukemia recurred, however, and she died 6 months after the diagnosis was made.
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PMID:A case of adult T cell leukemia complicated by proliferative synovitis. 202 26

A 3 year old girl presented with malignant osteopetrosis, which was treated by allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Successful engraftment was complicated by prolonged hypercalcaemia, which was controlled by a combination of a bisphosphonate, phosphate infusions, vigorous resalination, and salmon calcitonin. She was alive and well 16 months after the transplant.
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PMID:Malignant osteopetrosis: hypercalcaemia after bone marrow transplantation. 203 58

A woman aged 62 developed a septic shock and pulmonary embolism after skin grafting for extensive burns. She was put on anticoagulants. A second shock led to renal insufficiency. Hypercalcaemia developed. A CT scan of the upper abdomen disclosed enlarged adrenal glands. An acute adrenal haemorrhage was suspected. The levels of cortisol were low in the plasma and urine and did not respond to ACTH stimulation. Cortisone replacement therapy improved the condition of the patient and normalized plasma calcium levels. The mechanisms of hypercalcaemia in acute adrenal insufficiency are discussed. Multiple factors have been proposed: haemoconcentration, an increased affinity of plasma proteins for calcium, an increase in the filtrable calcium complexes, and an enhanced calcium mobilization of skeletal origin.
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PMID:Hypercalcaemia in acute adrenal insufficiency. A case report. 216 7

A 57-year-old female was admitted to our hospital with general lassitude, loss of appetite, nausea, upper abdominal pain, thirst, polydipsia and polyuria. On admission, she had an asymmetrical pear-shaped tumor in the right supraclavicular region and severe hypercalcemia. Plasma C-PTH was elevated to 22.72ng/ml. Plasma calcitonin was also elevated to 336 pg/ml. She died of respiratory and cardiac failure of two weeks after admission without any positive response to the treatment, including hemodialysis. Pathohistologically, the tumor was a parathyroid adenoma. The concentrations of C-PTH, intact PTH and calcitonin in the tumor tissue were markedly high: 4.56 micrograms/g wet, 13.9 ng/g wet and 50.7 ng/g wet, respectively. Immunohistologically, the tumor cells and the fibrous stroma were stained strongly positive to rabbit anti-human calcitonin antibody and rabbit anti-human N-PTH antibody by indirect immunoperoxidase staining. Calcitonin-producing tumors, except for medullary thyroid carcinoma are rarely reported. To our knowledge, this is the first report of such a calcitonin-producing parathyroid adenoma associated with primary hyperparathyroidism.
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PMID:A case of calcitonin-producing parathyroid adenoma with primary hyperparathyroidism. 258 94

We report a case of hypercalcemia in a 20-year-old woman with an ovarian seminoma. She had neither evidence of bone metastasis nor hyperparathyroidism. Hypercalcemia was well controlled by corticotherapy and chemotherapy, and remained normal after remission was obtained. Different patterns in paraneoplastic hypercalcemia are detailed, with emphasis on PTH-related proteins and vitamin-D metabolites. Eleven cases of neoplasm with hypercalcemia and elevated calcitriol level are reported in the literature. One of them is a seminoma. These elevated levels could be related either to a PTH-like protein, either to 1 alpha-hydroxylase activity in some tumoral cells. Three other cases of seminoma associated with hypercalcemia without dosage of vitamin-D metabolites are reported. Dosage of calcitriol might be performed in paraneoplastic hypercalcemia of seminoma.
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PMID:[Paraneoplastic hypercalcemia and ovarian seminoma. Review of the literature and etiological discussion apropos of a case]. 266 77

A patient with pulmonary sarcoidosis and symptomatic hypercalcemia had elevated serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D and angiotensin-converting enzyme levels, with evidence of deterioration of renal function. Pulmonary function tests were normal and there were no other findings to warrant immediate steroid use. She was treated with cellulose sodium phosphate, in an effort to control the hypercalcemia. Serum calcium declined to normal values within 4 weeks and was associated with symptomatic improvement and normalization of BUN and creatinine, indicating perhaps a direct relationship between serum calcium and renal function in this setting. These observations suggest that the hypercalcemia of sarcoidosis may be successfully treated with cellulose sodium phosphate presumably by reducing intestinal calcium absorption, but further clinical trials will be necessary to establish its effectiveness in the long term.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia of sarcoidosis treated with cellulose sodium phosphate. 285 38


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