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

In the past, patients with multiple myeloma and acute renal failure have had a poor prognosis. Few patients recovered renal function and fewer still survived for prolonged time periods. This report describes the course of 10 patients with multiple myeloma and true acute renal failure treated during the decade 1970 to 1980, and reviews recent reports concerning this association. The use of radiographic contrast agents is no longer the primary predisposing factor to acute renal failure in the myeloma population. Rather, infection, hypercalcemia, and dehydration in the presence of light chain excretion are the major conditions precipitating the renal failure. Despite severe renal failure requiring dialysis, many patients may regain good renal function. Factors associated with a good or poor prognosis in this population are reviewed. The prognosis in patients with myeloma and acute renal failure has greatly improved in recent years, and prolonged survival may occur.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure in patients with multiple myeloma. 669 48

In outlining the pathology of various electrolyte metabolism abnormalities in cancer patients we considered the main clinical points between pathologies and emergency treatment. In regard to sodium (Na+) metabolism, one pathologic state that requires our attention is hypernatremia. Hypernatremia is accompanied with dehydration and is due to water loss, vomiting, diarrhea and renal insufficiency. One of the major causes of this condition is lack of the antidiuretic hormone due to intracranial metastasis of the tumor. When hypernatremia becomes severe, it is accompanied with circulatory failure, muscular asthenia, disorientation, convulsions, coma and other cerebral symptoms. Treatment consists of replenishing the water content by infusion of electrolyte solutions which should be carefully conducted after complete diagnose of the severity of the patient's pathological condition. Hyponatremia, like sick cell syndrome, is observed relatively frequently in cancer patients. When the serum Na level falls markedly, it induces cerebral edema and causes disorders of consciousness. The major treatment consists of providing both water and sodium supplements. Hyperkalemia is observed at the time of renal insufficiency, tissue lesions, vomiting, and diarrhea. When serum potassium level rises, it causes bradycardia, ventricular fibrillation, or cardiac arrest. It is important to diagnostically apprehend the severity of this condition using EKG and determining the serum K1+ level. For emergency treatment injection of calcium gluconate is very effective. Hypokalemia is often manifested by the loss of intestinal fluids due to diarrhea or during administration of diuretic agents. Clinical symptoms include neural paralysis but emergencies occur relatively infrequently. K C1 injections are used in treating this condition. Hypercalcemia is manifested in cancer patients during hyperparathyroidism. Its clinical symptoms include lassitude, tachycardia, nausea, vomiting, and renal dys-function, leading to neural symptoms in severe cases. The main treatment consists of injection of physiological saline solution and administration of calcitonin, mithramycin. Hypocalemia is manifested during renal insufficiency, lack of vitamin D, and hypothyroidism. In classic cases it causes tetanic spasms. Injection of calcium is an effective treatment but since during tetanic spasms alcalosis may easily occur, treatment should only be provided after obtaining a complete understanding of the patient's condition. The pathological conditions described above can not be said to specific to cancer but it should be kept in mind that one of their main causative factors is the involvement of mechanism which produces ectopic hormones from cancerous tissues.
...
PMID:[Electrolyte metabolism and emergency]. 688 72

50% of hospitalized medical emergency cases are cardiological and respiratory emergencies. Myocardial infarction, cardiogenic shock, ventricular arrhythmias and left ventricular failure often cause sudden death occurring within 1 or 2 hours. Therefore immediate management is necessary already in the prehospital phase of cardiovascular events. This does also apply for acute respiratory failure due to obstructive ventilatory disorders. Acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease frequently are masked and may be misinterpreted as encephalopathy or alcohol withdrawal syndrome. Sedation may be dangerous. Also neuroglucopenic syndrome and hyperosmolar coma are occasionally interpreted wrongly. Thyrotoxic crisis, adrenal crisis and hypercalcemia are characterized by lethargy, mental disturbance and weakness, by dehydration, myopathy, nausea, constipation, diarrhea or tenesms or arrhythmias. In this situation of varied symptoms the most important action is to think of endocrine emergency, which may have multiple etiologies.
...
PMID:[Cardiovascular emergencies--endocrine and metabolic crises. Practical hints for the physician in emergency service]. 711 36

Hyperparathyroid crisis is a rare disease but should be suspected in acutely ill patients complaining of weakness, lethargy, nausea, vomiting, confusion and abdominal pain. Despite the variety of clinical manifestations, the syndrome forms a distinctive pattern which, in the presence of a serum calcium level greater than 16 mg/100 ml, should be recognized. The most difficult problem in diagnosis is the differentiation of hyperparathyroid crisis from ectopic parathyroid hormone-producing tumors. The disease is an endocrine emergency which requires prompt surgery after rapid correction of dehydration and hypercalcemia. The best results are achieved by removing offending parathyroid tissue within 72 hours after the onset of symptoms.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism: hyperparathyroid crisis. 730 6

Parathyroid crisis is an unusual form of primary hyperparathyroidism characterized by life-threatening hypercalcemia. We encountered nine patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, who showed various clinical symptoms including psychoneurotic symptoms, as a result of marked hypercalcemia. The average age of the patients was 49 (29 to 77), with an even distribution between men and women. Marked hypercalcemia (16.1 +/- 2.0 mg/dl) was accompanied by high levels of parathyroid hormone. Physiological saline solution, furosemide and calcitonin were administered to the nine patients for ten to thirty-fore days, respectively, in order to correct hypercalcemia and dehydration, and then parathyroidectomy was performed. Postoperative courses were uneventful, and the psychoneurotic symptoms improved markedly. No renal or cardiac dysfunction was observed. Since surgery (parathyroidectomy) is effective for the present condition, it seems important to quickly relieve dehydration and to operate early rather than to offer prolonged treatment by medication.
...
PMID:[Parathyroid crisis]. 775 86

The renal involvement in a multiple myeloma case (MM) has a frequency of 50% and causes a worsening of the disease with a survival average of about 12 months. Myeloma cast nephropathy (MCN) represents the more frequent clinic, histological form of nephropathy in course of MM and it evolves when monoclonal light free chain deposit in the renal tubules together with some other worse cases like dehydration and/or hypercalcaemia. We analyze here the clinical and renal histological features of eight patients treated for acute renal failure found in MCN in course of MM grade B. This was discovered through renal bioptic check-up. We have evaluated the Bence-Jones proteinuria, the recurrence of the condition of risk and the course of the renal failure of these patients also in order to treat the hematological illness.
...
PMID:[Acute kidney failure in the patient with multiple myeloma. An analysis of the authors' personal cases]. 775 76

Hypercalcemic crisis or severe hypercalcemia represents a life-threatening emergency. The most common cause is hypercalcemia of malignancy, although granulomatous diseases, previously undetected primary hyperparathyroidism, medication-induced hypercalcemia, and a few rarer causes may result in this endocrine emergency as well. The clinical presentation and prognosis depend on the acuity of the development of hypercalcemia, the degree of hypercalcemia, and the underlying cause. Certainly, patients with malignancy who develop hypercalcemia superimposed on their already debilitated state are more likely to have a poor outcome than a previously relatively healthy patient with thiazide-induced hypercalcemia, for example. The clinical presentation of patients with hypercalcemic crisis varies depending once again on the underlying cause and degree and rapidity of the hypercalcemia. Most patients experience some constitutional symptoms, neurologic symptoms, gastrointestinal symptoms, and renal manifestations of hypercalcemia. Immediate and effective therapy directed toward the pathophysiology of hypercalcemia is essential. General measures must be implemented to reverse the dehydration, to promote urinary calcium excretion, to avoid prolonged immobilization, and to identify the underlying cause of hypercalcemia. Specific measures directed at inhibiting bone resorption, increasing renal sodium and calcium excretion, and occasionally at decreasing intestinal absorption of calcium (or more specifically blocking vitamin D metabolism) should also be implemented. Obviously the more reversible the underlying cause of hypercalcemia, the more aggressive one should be with the therapy. The literature was reviewed to compile comparative data that practitioners may use in choosing among the various pharmacologic therapies available for the treatment of acute hypercalcemia. Despite all the advances in the field, hypercalcemic crisis still carries a significant mortality risk, although with appropriate therapy with the aforementioned general and specific measures, the calcium level can effectively be lowered in most patients.
...
PMID:Hypercalcemic crisis. 780 96

Severe hypercalcemia is mainly caused by inappropriately high concentrations of compounds which promote bone resorption, in particular PTH, PTHrP, or 1,25 (OH)2D3. The major consequences are impaired central nervous system and kidney function (polyuria/dehydration); the latter, in turn, aggravate hypercalcemia via decreased fluid intake, mobility, and renal calcium clearance. The most common causes of hypercalcemia are primary hyperparathyroidism and tumors, drugs (in particular thiazides, lithium, vitamin D and vitamin A and their derivatives), granulomatous and infectious diseases. The patient with mild hypercalcemia should be controlled (and if necessary operated on for adenoma of the parathyroid glands), while the patient with acute severe hypercalcemia needs to be treated immediately by (1.) 0.9% NaCl i.v. to restore plasma volume, (2.) bisphophonates i.v. to block bone resorption, and (3.) therapy for the underlying disorder.
...
PMID:[Hypercalcemia]. 802 86

Plasma cell leukemia is a rare disorder with poor prognosis. We present a case of non-secretory primary plasma cell leukemia (Bence-Jones kappa type), which was treated successfully by VEP-IFN-alpha therapy. A 82-year old man was admitted to Kanazawa Medical University in May 1991, because of emaciation and dehydration. Clinical findings showed decreased level of gamma-globulin (IgG, IgA and IgM were all decreased markedly), hypercalcemia, renal dysfunction and increased serum beta-2 microglobulin. The peripheral blood leukocyte count was 30,100/microliters with 64% plasma cells, and 80.4% plasma cells were also observed in the bone marrow. Only light chain-kappa was detected in plasma cells by an immunohistochemical staining method, but immunoelectrophoresis showed no M-bow either in serum or urine. Electron microscopy revealed typical plasma cells with prominently developed rough endoplasmic reticulum. From these results, the diagnosis of non-secretory primary plasma cell leukemia was established. He was treated with VEP-IFN-alpha regimen, and plasma cells decreased markedly in both peripheral blood and bone marrow. Serum immunoglobulin recovered to within the normal range. After 6 courses of VEP-IFN-alpha, complete remission was achieved and the remission was maintained until he died of an unrelated event, bronchial obstruction due to misswallowing, in April 1992.
...
PMID:[Successful VEP-IFN-alpha therapy in a case of non-secretory plasma cell leukemia (BJ-kappa type)]. 807 91

The renal concern in a multiple myeloma (MM) case has a frequency of 50% and causes a worsening of the disease with a survival average of about 12 months. The monoclonal light free chains (CLL) produced in excess by the plasmacytes are present in the urine as proteinuria of Bence Jones (PBJ) in 60-70% of patients affected by MM. They represent the major pathogenetic factor of the nephropathy in course of MM as they can deposit in shape of intratubular "casts" in the myeloma casts nephropathy (MCN). In some worse cases, dehydration or hypercalcaemia can cause an irreversible acute renal insufficiency (RI). It is therefore important in a patient affected with MM with PBJ to prevent, locate and opportunely treat these situations which worsen the nephropathy. Beside the tubular cast nephropathy, the CLL "accumulate" in the kidney even though with a lower frequency compared to MCN, in the light chains deposition disease (LCDD) and in the amyloidosis AL (AL). LCDD is characterized by a deposit of nodular amorphous materials PAS positive in the glomerulus and sometimes even in the tubulus. It usually presents itself as a chronic RI and a proteinuria causing nephrotic syndrome (NS). This quickly evolves into uraemia and its evolution can be lessened by the MM treatment. AL in course of MM also reveals with a chronic RI and NS. CLLs deposit in the typical fibrillar structure, on the vessel walls, in the glomerulus, in the mesangium and can be marked out with the Congo red colouring and the subsequent green birefringence through microscope with polarized light. Prognosis of AL is extremely severe and no benefit is given by the treatment of the hematological illness. It is therefore absolutely necessary to study the renal histology through biopsy when MM is grade B, that is, with serumal creatinine above 2 mg/dl as: MCN imposes the MM treatment programme in order to reduce the tubular excess of PBJ and to attempt to make RI reversible; MCN with tubular atrophy and interstitial fibrosis results in an unfavourable prognosis as it expresses a nephropathic irreversibility due to the loss nephrons. It will therefore necessary to start on a renal substitutional treatment programme. Renal damage in course of MM is not always tubular, rather an unexpected glomerular damage of LCDD or amyloidosis AL type can be found.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[The kidney in multiple myeloma. The physiopathological and clinical aspects]. 818 90


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>