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)

We describe a 77-year-old woman who developed a confusional state, cognitive impairment, behavioural abnormalities and dysphasia after treatment of hypercalcaemia. Repeated EEG recording revealed rhythmic sharp-wave activity over the right parietal-occipital lobe. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed marked hyperintense signal changes bilaterally. The diagnosis of a non-convulsive status epilepticus (NCSE) was made. With antiepileptic treatment the patient improved and MRI as well as EEG changes were almost all reversible. NCSE is an important differential diagnosis of patients with neuropsychiatric symptoms and can develop after rapid lowering of serum calcium levels in hypercalcaemia.
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PMID:Non-convulsive status epilepticus with marked neuropsychiatric manifestations and MRI changes after treatment of hypercalcaemia. 1108 13

A 59-year-old man with a 30-year history of type 2 diabetes mellitus presented with fatigue, confusion, and weight loss over a 3-month period. He was found to be hypercalcemic (11.8 mg/dL) and dehydrated, and his hypercalcemia improved with intravenous fluids. While in the hospital, he developed hyponatremia, hypoglycemia, and hypotension. He was found to have a subnormal cortisol level of 2.3 microg/dL at baseline, which increased to only 5.6 microg/dL 60 minutes after a 250-microg corticotropin intravenous stimulation test. The patient developed pneumonia and adult respiratory distress syndrome and died of an acute myocardial infarction. During the autopsy, he was found to have lymphocytic hypophysitis with a severe reduction in corticotropin-producing anterior pituitary cells. No malignancy was identified at autopsy. He is the first male patient to be described in the literature who presented with hypercalcemia caused by lymphocytic hypophysitis.
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PMID:Lymphocytic hypophysitis in a man presenting with hypercalcemia. 1126

Hypercalcemia is a rare complication of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), usually seen in the accelerated or blastic phases of the disease and associated with a poor prognosis. T-cell lymphoid phenotype is also an infrequent finding in the blast crisis (BC) of CML. A CML patient who had hypercalcemia as the presenting feature of a T-cell BC is reported. She was a 78 year-old woman who, at four months of CML diagnosis, developed weakness, bone pain, and mental confusion, with hypercalcemia being subsequently found. Although the peripheral blood and bone marrow were consistent with the chronic phase of CML, mediastinal enlargement, a soft tissue mass adjacent to the iliac bone, and multiple osteolytic lesions were seen. Serum levels of parathyroid hormone (PTH) and PTH-related peptide were normal, whereas the search for a second neoplasm was negative. The hypercalcemia initially responded to conventional treatment, but it reappeared two weeks later. Coincidentally, a high proportion of blast cells of T-cell origin at the cortical thymocyte stage were observed in the patient's peripheral blood and bone marrow, and she died shortly afterwards.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia as the presenting feature of t-cell lymphoid blast crisis of ph-positive chronic myeloid leukemia. 1134 75

Bisphosphonates, analogues of pyrophosphate, are potent inhibitors of osteoclast-mediated bone resorption. They are used in the treatment of Paget's disease of bone, hypercalcaemia and osteolytic bone disease of malignancy, primary and secondary hyperparathyroidism, and in osteoporosis. Bisphosphonate treatment causes an early reduction in bone resorption followed by a later reduction in bone formation. The early inhibition of bone resorption induces a reduction in serum calcium which leads to increased parathyroid hormone (PTH), and subsequently an increase in 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D. The secondary hyperparathyroidism of bisphosphonate treatment also leads to urinary calcium conservation and phosphaturia, and a reduction in serum phosphate. The increase in the PTH following bisphosphonate therapy is a response to the change in serum calcium and can occur even when there is hypercalcaemia, and this can cause confusion in the interpretation of PTH results. The hypocalcaemic response to bisphosphonates is occasionally severe, especially in patients with hypoparathyroidism. The recent elucidation of bisphosphonate action at the cellular level on the mevalonate pathway has led to interest in its effects on lipoprotein metabolism, which may prove to be of clinical significance. Newer and more potent bisphosphonates are currently undergoing clinical trials in malignant bone disease and osteoporosis, and will lead to further advances in the optimal management of these conditions.
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PMID:Bisphosphonates: an overview with special reference to alendronate. 1173 44

A 75-yr-old male simultaneously having lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (LPL) and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is presented. He had manifested with lumbago, high-grade fever, and confusion. Physical examination on admission showed disorientation and severe back pain. There were neither lymphadenopathy nor hepatosplenomegaly. Routine laboratory tests showed moderate pancytopenia, hypercalcemia (serum calcium, 15.9 mg/dL), IgM lambda-type monoclonal gammopathy (IgG, 405 mg/dL; IgA, 42 mg/dL; and IgM, 2023 mg/dL), and lambda-type Bence-Jones protein in the urine (0.8 g/d). Bone marrow biopsy showed the clusters of surface lambda-positive small-sized mature-appearing lymphoplasmacytoid cells. Bone survey and computed tomographic scan showed multiple osteolytic lesions and a tumor involving the third lumbar spine (L3). An open biopsy of the L3 tumor showed diffuse proliferation of CD20- and lambda-positive large cells. We thus diagnosed the patient as simultaneously having LPL and DLBCL. Although the combination chemotherapy was at least partially effective, he died of bacteremia and organ failure after three courses of chemotherapy. To clarify the clonal relatedness between LPL and DLBCL, we analyzed the sequences of the complementarity-determining region 3 in immunoglobulin heavy-chain genes. The data showed that LPL and DLBCL in the present patient originated from two independent clones.
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PMID:Simultaneous development of lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma--analyses of the clonal relatedness by sequencing CDR3 in immunoglobulin heavy chain genes. 1258 Nov 94

Parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) plays a central role in humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy (HHM), which is one of the most frequent paraneoplastic syndromes. PTHrP produced by the tumor acts through a common PTH/PTHrP receptor to promote bone resorption, inhibit calcium excretion from the kidney, and induce hypercalcemia. Patients with HHM often develop cachexia associated with typical symptoms such as anorexia, malaise, nausea, constipation, polyuria, polydipsia, and confusion. The etiology of the cachexia is not fully understood but is thought to be caused by hypercalcemia and various cytokines such as interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, leukemia inhibitory factor, and others. In this study, we investigated the role of PTHrP in hypercalcemia and cachexia in HHM by using humanized anti-PTHrP antibody. A mouse monoclonal antibody that binds to PTHrP amino acid sequence 1-34 and inhibits PTHrP function has been humanized to create a specific and potent agent for the treatment of patients with HHM. The mouse monoclonal antibody has been shown to have antihypercalcemic activity against nude mice bearing human tumors. Because a mouse antibody is highly immunogenic in human patients, the complementarity-determining regions from the mouse antibody were grafted into a human antibody. The resulting humanized antibody specifically recognizes PTHrP(1-34) and neutralizes PTHrP functions in vitro and in vivo. The humanized anti-PTHrP antibody was administered intravenously to HHM model animals bearing tumors such as LC-6 human lung carcinoma. These animals showed symptoms similar to those of patients with HHM (eg, hypercalcemia and cachexia). The humanized anti-PTHrP antibody-treated animals responded with normalization of blood ionized calcium level through an improvement of bone metabolism and calcium excretion. Moreover, the treated animals also showed an improvement in body weight, ultromotivity, metabolic alkalosis, food consumption, water intake, serum phosphorus, and renal function. Consequently, the humanized antibody-treated animals experienced complete resolution of hypercalcemia and cachexia. These results suggest that the humanized antibody would be an effective and beneficial agent for patients with HHM, and that PTHrP is a major pathogenetic factor of hypercalcemia and cachexia in patients with HHM.
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PMID:Treatment of malignancy-associated hypercalcemia and cachexia with humanized anti-parathyroid hormone-related protein antibody. 1461 38

We report the case of a 63-year-old man who presented with weakness, fatigue, dehydration, confusion, abdominal pain, congestive heart failure and hypercalcemia. He expired and autopsy revealed an exulcerating carcinoma of the esophagus, invading the esophageal wall and metastasizing to the lungs, skin and lymph nodes. Histology demonstrated an epithelial tumor consisting of two components with transition between the two. One component was a keratinizing squamous cell carcinoma, whereas the other component consisted of pleomorphic small cells. The hypercalcemia was assumed to be due to parathyroid hormone related protein (PHRP), which was demonstrated by immunohistochemistry only in the pleomorphic small cells and not in the squamous cells. PHRP induced humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy is most often associated with squamous cell carcinomas. The finding that in our case, the pleomorphic small cell component was PHRP immunopositive and the squamous cell component showed no immunoreactivity, is intriguing and remains unexplained.
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PMID:Humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy due to bipartite squamous cell/small cell carcinoma of the esophagus immunoreactive for parathyroid hormone related protein. 1464

Severe hypercalcemia is a life-threatening medical emergency. It is most commonly caused by malignant tumors, but can also be caused by primary hyperparathyroidism or less often by a dysregulated production of active vitamin D in granulomatous disorders. Symptoms include nausea, vomiting, renal insufficiency, severe dehydration, lethargy, confusion, and even coma. Severity of symptoms, calcium concentrations, and the overall status of the patient are important considerations in selecting appropriate therapy. Hydration to correct volume depletion is the cornerstone of acute therapy. Loop diuretics may be added to saline hydration after extracellular fluid volume has been replenished to enhance urinary calcium excretion and mitigate fluid overload from rehydration. Calcitonin and intravenous infusion of bisphosphonates reduce serum calcium levels by interfering with calcium release from the skeleton. Dialysis with a low or zero calcium dialysate is reserved for patients who are refractory to these measures. Corticosteroids are effective with hypercalcemia due to increased vitamin D levels and in multiple myeloma.
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PMID:[Hypercalcemic crisis]. 1468 84

Plasma cell leukemia (PCL) is a rare disease and is the least common variant of multiple myeloma accounting for 2-3% of all plasma cell dyscrasias. We report a patient who presented with history of high grade fever, weakness, palpitations, loss of appetite, bone pains and mental confusion for twenty days. Initial evaluation revealed plasmacytosis with blood plasma cell count of 5184/cumm. His hemoglobin (Hb) was 11.3 gm/dl, platelets were 75000/cumm and total leucocyte count (TLC) was 21600/cumm (24% plasma cells). Bone marrow examination revealed >60% plasmablasts. Serum LDH was high at 3117 U/L and serum calcium was also elevated at 13.9 mg/dl. A diagnosis of PCL was made and the patient was started on treatment for hypercalcaemia with Melphalan/Prednisolone regime along with supportive care. Patient deteriorated very rapidly despite treatment and died on the eighth day. A detailed report of this case and a review of PCL is presented here.
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PMID:Plasma cell leukemia: case report of a rare and aggressive variant of multiple myeloma. 1630 56

Life-threatening metabolic complications observed in cancer patients are: hypercalcaemia, hyponatremia, hyperurcaemia, tumour lysis syndrome, hypoglycaemia, hyperuremia and hypercreatininemia secondary to renal failure, hyperammoniemia, lactic acidosis and adrenal failure. They may be associated with any kind of neoplastic disease causing dysfunction of vital organs, which can be determined by neoplastic spread, anti-cancer treatment or, more rarely, by paraneoplastic phenomena. The clinical presentation of metabolic complications is typically aspecific. Encephalopathy, raging from mild confusion to coma, is the most common and clinically most severe symptom. The severity of consciousness impairment is related to both the rate of onset and the magnitude of the metabolic disorder. The definitive diagnosis will be established by laboratory examination and radiological work-up. Cancer patients presenting metabolic should be referred to oncologic departments or intensive care units. The treatment of metabolic disorders include: prophylactic measures, emergency measures to preserve vital functions and to restore biological parameters and the treatment of the underlying primary.
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PMID:Metabolic emergencies. 1633 7


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