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)

Four antisera raised in the goat have very different properties: all recognized the immunoreactive calcitonin (iCT) of medullary carcinoma of the thyroid (MCT), one the response of normal subjects to induced or endogenous hypercalcemia and 2 others a different molecular species which occurs in half the patients with cancer of breast and 3/4 of patients with cancer of the lung. The latter two antisera are most sensitive to the 22-32 sequence of human calcitonin. Depending on the antiserum used, 4 or 7 peaks of immunoreactivity are found in eluates by column chromatography or stimulated serum from MCT. Not all elevated levels of iCT in serum are diagnostic of MCT and ectopic production by lung and breast cancer must be considered. Presence of higher levels of iCT with greater amounts of cancer tissue and undetectable levels after surgery or radiotherapy when using antisera which require intact molecule of calcitonin for recognition suggest the possibility that sequential calcitonin levels with differentiating antisera may be helpful in assessing the extent of disease and response to therapy.
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PMID:Immuno-heterogeneity of the calcitonins of hypercalcemia, breast and lung cancers and medullary carcinoma of thyroid. 47 68

Rapid differential diagnosis of hypercalcaemia due to primary hyperparathyroidism or malignancy with or without bone metastases may be life saving. A parathormone infusion test (6 USP units/kg body wt X 20 min) enables a differential diagnosis within three hours by means of measurement of renal calcium excretion. In normal persons calcium excretion decreased from 147 +/- 90 to 79 +/- 54 mumol/h (x +/- s, n = 10). In primary hyperparathyroidism with hypercalcaemia the high calcium excretion remained unchanged: 716 +/- 162 mumol/h before and 804 +/- 130 mumul/h 120 minutes after the PTH infusion (n = 12). In patients with hypercalcaemia caused by bronchial carcinoma with (n = 5) and without (n = 1) bone metastases calcium excretion decreased from 552 +/- 182 to 163 +/- 114 mumol/h. As a consequence of these data this test is advisable when the indication for operation in cases with hypercalcaemia has to be reached within a few hours.
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PMID:[Differential diagnosis of hypercalcaemia by measurement of renal calcium excretion during parathormone administration (author's transl)]. 49 90

Seven out of twelve patients with malignancy and hypercalcaemia had associated psychiatric symptoms. The mental aberrations disappeared when the calcium levels returned to normal after treatment.
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PMID:Hypercalcaemia-induced psychopathology in malignant diseases. 51 21

Seventy-eight advanced breast cancer patients, most of whom had had prior treatment, were treated with the synthetic antiestogen tamoxifen. The overall objective response rate was 27% (21/78). An additional 19% (15/78) showed disease stabilization. Sixty-seven percent (14/21) of the responses were in soft tissue sites, 24% (5/21) on bony sites and one each occurred in liver and nodular lung disease. Forty percent of patients with soft-tissue disease alone responded, while less than 10% of patients with visceral disease showed responses in visceral sites. The response rate was 28% among patients with a known positive estrogen receptor (ER) assay. It was 21% among patients who had previously received cytotoxic drugs. Toxicity was mild and was seen in nausea and vomiting, hot flushes and vaginal bleeding, and occasional myelosuppression. One patient was withdrawn from the study because of a rash. In two patients the disease flared, once with concomitant hypercalcemia. Tamoxifen is a useful agent for advanced breast cancer even in some patients with visceral disease.
Cancer Chemother Pharmacol 1979
PMID:Phase-II trial of tamoxifen in advanced breat cancer. 53 27

Polypoid lesions of the esophagus occur infrequently and may be benign or malignant. Polypoid pedunculated malignancy of the esophagus is still a rare lesion. We report three additional cases in this paper, two associated with tumor-related hypercalcemia, and review the recent literature on malignant polypoid lesions of the esophagus.
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PMID:Malignant polypoid lesions of the esophagus: review and case reports. 54 73

Despite the high frequency of skeletal metastases from cancer of the prostate, hypercalcaemia is extremely uncommon in this condition. In two patients with advanced, poorly differentiated metastasizing cancer a fairly uniform clinical picture developed, with anaemia, leukocytosis, increased serum creatinine, thrombocytopenia, elevated alkaline and acid phosphatase levels and symptoms secondary to hypercalcaemia. The development of more effective agents against cancer of the prostate will probably afford longer palliation, but evidently at a risk of severe metabolic disturbances in the preterminal state.
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PMID:Advanced cancer of the prostate combined with hypercalcaemia. 59 76

All patients with hyperparathyroidism seen in a large referral military hospital within a twenty month period underwent neck exploration by one of us (HN). Three patients were found to have an unsuspected solid thyroid nodule measuring 0.5 to 1.5 cm. All were widely excised by thyroid lobectomy and isthmectomy and found to be follicular or papillary carcinoma of the thyroid. These three patients join thirty-one previously reported clinical cases documenting an association between parathyroid adenoma and nonmedullary carcinoma of the thyroid. Because of the high potential for malignancy in this clinical setting, we urge careful examination and palpation of the thyroid gland during neck exploration for hypercalcemia in order to detect and cure "early" malignancies of the thyroid.
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PMID:Unsuspected nonmedullary carcinoma of the thyroid in patients with hyperparathyroidism. 59 48

The plasma parathormone was measured by radioimmunological determination in 23 cases of cancer with bone metastases, 8 of mammary origin. In 11 cases the plasma parathormone (iPTH) was less than 4 ng/ml (lower normal limit), as might be expected in view of the hypercalcemia. In 12 cases the iPTH was higher than 4 ng/ml, in 8 of these higher than 8 ng/ml (upper normal limit). These results are suggestive of the role of a substance analogous to parathormone in the genesis of the hypercalcaemia and peritumoral bone resorption of bone metastases of solid tumors.
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PMID:[Radioimmunologic determination of plasma parathormone in hypercalcemia caused by cancer with osseous metastases]. 60 75

An unusual finding of systemic calcinosis in a patient with a nonparathyroid malignant neoplasm stimulated us to do a sclinicopathologic review of similar cases at our institution in the past seven years. Of 3,268 autopsies performed from 1968 to 1975, a total of 17 cases of calcinosis were found, 11 with solid tumors and 6 with hematopoietic neoplasms. Calcinosis was most prominent in the lung, kidney, heart, and stomach and was rarely discovered prior to death. Eighty-two percent of the patients had hypercalcemia and 53% had associated bony metastatic disease. Corticosteroid or phosphate treatment for the hypercalcemia may have contributed to the tissue deposition of calcium. Significant hepatic, renal, metabolic, and pulmonary dysfunctions were also associated with this disorder. Thirty-six percent of the patients had hypercalcemia without skeletal involvement; tumor-produced parathormone-like substances may be responsible for these calcium abnormalities. Calcinosis was a significant complication of neoplastic disease in these patients and contributed to morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Calcinosis in nonparathyroid malignant disease: an unusual case report and clinicopathologic review of 17 cases. 62 63

Various hormones have been implicated in the genesis of hypercalcemia in patients with malignancy. Ectopic secretion of PTH by tumor has been documented in only a few patients; rather, elevated levels of circulating iPTH have been presumed to reflect tumor production of hormone in most patients. Small fragments of PTH, as well as polypeptides larger than native PTH, have been described; their biological roles are unclear. The pattern of immunoreactivity, however, has been used to differentiate patients with ectopic hyperparathyroidism from patients with concomitant primary hyperparathyroidism. Vitamin D-like sterols produced by breast cancer seldom reach plasma levels necessary for physiological effects. Members of the prostaglandin family have been proposed to induce hypercalcemia through osteoclast activation or alteration of the immune system and also to affect the frequency of bone metastases. At present, no direct evidence is available to prove a direct role for these effects and prostaglandins are most useful as possible indicators of disease activity.
Cancer 1978 Jun
PMID:Mechanisms of hypercalcemia in malignancy. 65 92


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