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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (hypercalcemia)
10,293 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Retrospective analysis has been performed on 108 consecutive patients operated for primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) at 75 to 85 years of age (mean 79 years). The preoperative serum calcium value averaged 2.99 mM, and six patients had hypercalcemic crisis. Psychic disturbances were seen in 60 patients (56%), 40% of whom demonstrated dementia. Skeletal and muscular complaints were registered in 29% and 19%, respectively, and only 6% were overtly asymptomatic. Cardiovascular diseases were presented by 69% of the patients, 13% had diabetes mellitus, and 26% were institutionalized prior to surgery. Bilateral neck exploration disclosed a single adenoma in 69%, which was of the oxyphil cell type in 13%, and water-clear (n = 3) or chief cell hyperplasia in 27%. The total glandular weight averaged 1085 mg. Altogether 72 patients operated on after 1980 demonstrated a perioperative (30-day) mortality of 1.4%; the corresponding morbidity of 8.7% mainly included infections as well as a vocal cord paralysis in one patient and two incisional hematomas. Analysis for mean 3.1 years postoperatively displayed reversal of hypercalcemia in 95% of the patients; 2.8% of those operated after 1980 had persistent disease. Symptoms seemed to be alleviated in 62%, with a similar rate attained in patients with dementia. Altogether 60 patients died from mainly cardiovascular diseases mean 4.2 years after the operation. Those succumbing the first postoperative year (n = 21) showed overrepresentation of cardiac diseases and diabetes mellitus. The results demonstrate prevalent psychic disturbances, oxyphil adenomas, and multiglandular parathyroid disease in elderly patients with primary HPT and favor rather liberal application of parathyroid surgery among these individuals.
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PMID:Surgery for sporadic primary hyperparathyroidism in the elderly. 772 53

Corticosteroids are extensively prescribed in advanced cancer for various specific indications (e.g. spinal cord compression), for pain relief, as hormone therapy and to stimulate appetite and wellbeing. Choice of corticosteroid is dictated largely by local fashion, and times of administration are more traditional than pharmacological. Corticosteroids have many potential disadvantages, some life-threatening (e.g. masked septicaemia). Others are seriously debilitating (e.g. myopathy, avascular bone necrosis). Oropharyngeal candidiasis is a common complication. Corticosteroids are withdrawn in about 5% of patients because of unacceptable adverse effects, including moon-face and diabetes mellitus. Corticosteroid hypersensitivity occurs, and the succinate salts have been associated with bronchospasm. Steroid pseudorheumatism may occur with high dose therapy or when tailing off after a prolonged course. Important drug interactions with corticosteroids relate to salt and water retention, and decreased glucose tolerance. Some anticonvulsants cause an increased clearance of corticosteroids and, with dexamethasone, up to a 50% reduction in the anticipated effect. The benefit of corticosteroids in terms of increased appetite, mood and activity has been demonstrated in several controlled trials. The effect may well be time-limited in most patients. In several studies, corticosteroids have resulted in an analgesic-sparing effect. Some centres use very high doses of dexamethasone in cases of spinal cord compression, although the justification for these is not obvious. Corticosteroids are used to help relieve nerve compression pain and in symptomatic raised intracranial pressure. Corticosteroids are also injected locally into or around bone metastases, particularly ribs and the sacro-iliac joints. Epidural injections are used for patients with troublesome intractable low back pain. Corticosteroids are now used less often in hypercalcaemia because of poor response rates. More benefit is obtained, however, if high dosages are used, e.g. prednisolone 60 to 80 mg/day. Dexamethasone is widely used as an antiemetic in association with chemotherapy. Some centres use dexamethasone by continuous subcutaneous infusion in selected patients when the oral route is not feasible. The choice of starting dose of a corticosteroid is largely arbitrary. It is important, however, not to miss a possible treatment benefit by prescribing too low a dose. For most patients, an initial dosage of prednisolone of 30 to 60 mg/day (dexamethasone 4 to 8 mg/day) is appropriate. In patients with anorexia, there are several alternative options that should be considered. There is evidence to suggest that patients with advanced cancer receiving a corticosteroid are not as closely monitored as other patients. There is a need to state clearly in writing the reason(s) for prescription and to review after 1 or 2 weeks.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The risks and benefits of corticosteroids in advanced cancer. 781 99

Possible new indications for the use of octreotide are discussed. In October 1988, octreotide received FDA-approved labeling for use in the management of carcinoid syndrome and vipomas. Since that time, research results and clinical experience have accumulated that suggest a potentially much broader therapeutic role for octreotide. Reports continue to be published on the use of octreotide for treating pituitary tumors, gastroenteropancreatic tumors, diabetes mellitus, AIDS-associated diarrhea, autonomic neuropathy, pancreatitis, pancreatic pseudocysts and ascites, complications of pancreatic surgery and transplantation, ileostomy-associated diarrhea, enterocutaneous fistulas, pancreatic fistulas, dumping syndrome, short bowel syndrome, and gastrointestinal bleeding. Other emerging indications for the use of octreotide include psoriasis, hypercalcemia, cancer-related pain, polycystic ovary syndrome, and certain cancers. In children, octreotide has been studied for use in treating hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy. Along with the common adverse effects of octreotide, such as pain at the injection site and nausea, less frequent effects, such as cholelithiasis, gallbladder hypercontractility, and gastritis have now been described. Much of what has been learned is based on small uncontrolled studies and case reports, since the rarity of many of the conditions for which octreotide has shown promise has tended to preclude larger studies. As clinical experience with octreotide accumulates and better-designed trials are completed where possible, a broader therapeutic role for octreotide is likely to be recognized.
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PMID:Emerging indications for octreotide therapy, Part 1. 804 37

The changes in normal endocrine physiology which accompany pregnancy result in changes in normal ranges of hormone levels and in specific changes in the course and management of endocrine diseases. This review presents information about the various endocrine diseases and their management in pregnant adolescents. Normal pituitary function during pregnancy is described as is the effect of pregnancy on pituitary tumors such as microadenomas and prolactinomas. The effects of bromocriptine therapy in cases where tumor enlargement occurs during pregnancy are tabulated. Methods of distinguishing placental growth hormone secretion and pituitary growth hormone secretion in patients with acromegaly are presented (with the note that acromegalic patients rarely become pregnant). TSH-secreting, gonadotropin, and nonsecreting tumors are rare in this age group, and there is no evidence that they enlarge during pregnancy. The discussion of the pituitary covers chronic hypopituitarism, Sheehan's Syndrome, lymphocytic hypophysitis, and diabetes insipidus. After reviewing normal changes in thyroid physiology during pregnancy, hyperthyroidism (usually due to Graves' disease), thyroid storm, and hypothyroidism are considered. The adrenal is the next subject, with a brief description of normal changes during pregnancy followed by comments on Cushing's Syndrome, adrenal insufficiency, congenital adrenal hyperplasia, and primary hyperaldosteronism. The symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment of pheochromocytomas, which are uncommon during pregnancy but are associated with high fetal and maternal mortality, are the next topics. After a review of changes in calcium metabolism during pregnancy and hypercalcemia, this report ends with a consideration of diabetes mellitus which includes alterations in maternal carbohydrate metabolism during pregnancy, effects of diabetes on the fetus, and management of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus during pregnancy (the most likely type to be present in adolescents).
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PMID:Endocrine problems of adolescent pregnancy. 824 53

We evaluated 259 dialysis patients using serum parathyroid hormone (PTH, IRMA; normal range 1 to 5.5 pM or 10 to 55 pg/ml), the deferoxamine infusion test and iliac crest bone biopsy to determine the various forms of renal osteodystrophy and their risk factors. Although half of the biopsied patients had low turnover osteodystrophy, evidence of aluminum toxicity was present in only 1/3 of them. Additional risk factors for this bone lesion included treatment with peritoneal dialysis, ingestion of calcium carbonate, diabetes mellitus and advanced age. The PTH levels in patients with the aplastic lesion were significantly lower than in patients with normal or high bone turnover lesions [7.7 +/- 6.1 vs. 36.9 +/- 3.2 pM (77 +/- 61 vs. 369 +/- 32 pg/ml), P < 0.0001]. Aside from hypercalcemia, these patients were relatively asymptomatic. In a second study, 10 patients on peritoneal dialysis with the aplastic lesion had their dialysate calcium lowered from 1.62 to 1.0 mM. This resulted in a significant increase in PTH levels, from [3.7 +/- 0.8 to 10.6 +/- 1.9 pM (37 +/- 8 to 106 +/- 19 pg/ml), P < 0.001] which persisted over the nine-month observation period. In conclusion, the aplastic lesion is the most common form of renal osteodystrophy, with aluminum intoxication implicated in only 1/3 of the cases. In the remainder, factors identified include therapy with peritoneal dialysis using supraphysiological dialysate calcium, oral CaCO3 intake and diabetes mellitus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Aplastic osteodystrophy without aluminum: the role of "suppressed" parathyroid function. 825 62

The normal fractional urinary excretion of filtered magnesium is about 5%. In magnesium deficiency in man, the kidneys can normally reduce the 24-hour urinary magnesium excretion to less than 1 mmol (24 mg) via unknown mechanisms, and initially without a fall in plasma magnesium concentration. Renal magnesium wasting may be defined as a urinary excretion greater than 1 mmol/day in the presence of hypomagnesemia (plasma magnesium < 0.7 mmol/l). Congenital renal magnesium wasting occurs in several syndromes including Bartter's syndrome in which it is associated with hypercalciuria, and the defect may be in the thick ascending limb of Henle's loop, and Gitelman's syndrome in which there is hypocalciuria, and the defect may be in the distal convoluted tubule. Other causes of renal magnesium wasting include diabetes mellitus, hypercalcemia and diuretics. Magnesium wasting may also result from various toxicities including those of cis-platinum, in which the biochemical features resemble Gitelman's syndrome, and those of aminoglycosides, pentamidine and cyclosporin. Calcitriol deficiency may also contribute to renal magnesium wasting in some circumstances. Mild hypermagnesemia may occur in familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia and may reflect abnormal sensitivity of the loop of Henle to calcium and magnesium ions. By contrast, the hypermagnesemia that occurs in chronic renal failure results from the reduced glomerular filtration of magnesium.
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PMID:Abnormal renal magnesium handling. 826 9

It is generally known that patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) feature disturbances in carbohydrate metabolism and hypertension. The incidence and prevalence of frank diabetes mellitus is significantly increased in these patients. The etiology and pathogenesis of the vascular and metabolic aberrations in this condition are still unclear. Glucose intolerance in pHPT is characterized by severe insulin resistance associated with pancreatic beta cell hypersecretion of insulin. Hypercalcemia is thought to be mainly responsible for the impaired glucose metabolism. However, several studies demonstrated that hypophosphatemia can also induce insulin hypersecretion and impair peripheral glucose uptake. Hypertension in primary hyperparathyroidism is mainly attributed to hypercalcemia. However, high peripheral insulin levels are also proposed to contribute to the development of essential hypertension and hyperinsulinemia per se is regarded as an important independent cardiovascular risk factor. After parathyroidectomy and decrease of the calcium levels to within the normal range, the blood pressure levels of the patients with pHPT normalised very quickly, whereas normalization of the high peripheral insulin levels was only found in a subgroup of patients. Thus, hypercalcemia seems to be mainly responsible for hypertension in primary hyperparathyroidism. Another important, yet unresolved issue is the question as to whether or to which extent the disturbances in glucose homeostasis are reversible after surgical correction of pHPT. At an early stage of the disease, insulin resistance and insulin hypersecretion are fully reversible after parathyroidectomy, whereas in patients with long-standing primary hyperparathyroidism and severely impaired glucose tolerance the metabolic disturbances will only partially improve. These results argue for improved screening to identify asymptomatic patients with primary hyperparathyroidism and for early surgical intervention in this disease.
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PMID:[Diabetes mellitus and carbohydrate metabolism in primary hyperparathyroidism]. 847 26

An 11-month-old male infant with recurrent supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) was treated with oral verapamil. Shortly thereafter he developed marked changes in behavior including lethargy, intensely increased thirst and urination, and irritability when denied fluids. "Primary" polydipsia was diagnosed following an evaluation which showed no evidence of adrenal insufficiency, diabetes insipidus, diabetes mellitus, hypercalcemia, hyperosmolality, or renal disease. The symptoms resolved 1 week after verapamil was discontinued.
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PMID:Verapamil-induced "primary" polydipsia. 852 7

Polyuria is usually the result of a water diuresis or an osmotic diuresis. Traditionally, the assessment of the extracellular fluid (ECF) volume and the concentration of Na+ in plasma is sufficient to differentiate between the two. We present a case and our approach, which is based on calculations and quantitation of osmoles, to demonstrate the utility of this approach. A patient with diabetes mellitus, human T-cell lymphocyte virus, type 1 (HTLV-1) associated lymphoma, and hypercalcemia presented with marked ECF volume contraction and polyuria. A spot urine osmolality was 567 mOsm/kg H2O in the face of urine output of approximately 6 L/d. The initial diagnosis was an osmotic diuresis. However, a quantitative analysis revealed the enormous number of osmoles could not be accounted for physiologically. Hence, we postulated a water diuresis to be the cause of the polyuria. To confirm this hypothesis, we found that at different times during his hospitalization, the urine specific gravity ranged from 1.005 to 1.022, and urine output varied markedly over 8-h periods. Despite a plasma sodium of 147 mmol/L, the patient did not complain of thirst. Taken together, this suggested the presence of a hypothalamic lesion which caused central diabetes insipidus with variable output of antidiuretic hormone together with a blunted thirst response. Illustration of the utility of a quantitative approach to polyuria is the focus of the discussion.
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PMID:Challenging consults: application of principles of physiology and biochemistry to the bedside. Osmotic diuresis: the importance of counting the number of osmoles excreted. 852 23

Vitamin D has been discovered at the beginning of this century. 7-Dehydrocholesterol is converted to vitamin D3 in the skin and after several hydroxylations it is further converted to the active hormonal form, 1 alpha,25-(OH)2D3. Vitamin D stimulates the absorption of calcium and phosphate and is an essential link in bone resorption and formation and calcium metabolism. 1 alpha,25-(OH)2D3 acts through a vitamin D receptor. These receptors are not only present in clinical target organs (kidney, gut, liver) but can also be found in a wide variety of "non-classical" tissues (keratinocytes, cells belonging to the immune system). Moreover, numerous cells (keratinocytes, macrophages) can locally synthetize or can be induced to synthetize 1 alpha,25-(OH)2D3 and these cells are responsive to its action. When these data are combined, a possible paracrine function of 1 alpha,25-(OH)2D3 can be suspected. Via this paracrine function 1 alpha,25-(OH)2D3 can suppress the cellular and humoral immunity. Based on the discovery of these effects on immune cells in vitro it became clear that 1 alpha,25-(OH)2D3 might be an interesting molecule to prevent autoimmune diseases and organ transplantation. This has already been shown in several animal models (Heymann nephritis, diabetes mellitus, experimental allergic-encephalomyelitis, lupus). 1 alpha,25-(OH)2D3 demonstrates however some side-effects (hypercalciuria, hypercalcemia, bone resorption) and for this reason 1 alpha,25-(OH)2D3-analogs are developed with dissociated effects i.e. an activity profile that allows a specific action on non-classical tissues without calcemic effects. Some chemical modifications of the side chain, A and/or CD-ring results in "superanalogs" with 10 to 100-fold more activity on cell differentiation and the immune system then 1 alpha,25-(OH)2D3 but with less calcemic activity in vivo. These biological effects can be explained by differences in pharmacokinetics (low affinity for the plasma vitamin D-binding protein and short extracellular half-life) and increased intracellular activation and gen transactivation. Preclinical research must still be done to select the most potent superanalogs and to find the exact protocols for the prevention and treatment of autoimmune diseases and rejection of transplanted organs.
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PMID:[Immune modulation by vitamin D analogs in the prevention of autoimmune diseases]. 857 69


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