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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (
hypercalcemia
)
10,293
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The need for treatment of mild and apparently asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) is questioned, but a raised incidence of cardiovascular disease has been regarded as evidence in favour of surgery. While it is well known that several risk factors for cardiovascular disease (
hypertension
, hyperlipidaemia and diabetes mellitus/impaired glucose tolerance) are overrepresented in HPT, it is not known whether surgery provides long-term normalization in these respects and reduces the risk of premature death. In a 15-year follow-up of a cohort of 172 subjects in whom mild
hypercalcaemia
was initially detected during a health screening, it was found that 56 subjects had died. 17 individuals had been operated on for HPT, 47 individuals were persistently hypercalcaemic, while 45 subjects had serum calcium within the normal range (seven individuals were lost to follow-up). There had been no significant differences in blood pressure between these groups of mildly hypercalcaemic patients and age- and sex-matched controls at the initial screening, but at follow-up blood pressure was significantly higher not only in subjects with persistent
hypercalcaemia
, but also in those who had been successfully operated on for HPT. Neither of the hypercalcaemic groups showed any significant deviations from the controls with regard to indices of lipid or glucose metabolism. These findings suggest that there is no simple cause-and-effect relationship to account for the propensity toward
high blood pressure
in primary HPT. Consequently it cannot be assumed that surgery for HPT will eliminate the increased risk of cardiovascular disease in patients with mild HPT.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular risk factors in primary hyperparathyroidism: a 15-year follow-up of operated and unoperated cases. 206 9
Reports of adults with Williams syndrome (WS) have been rare. We have evaluated 13 adult WS patients and reviewed 16 case reports of WS in patients older than age 16 years. Adults in our study had progressive multisystem medical problems. Cardiovascular complications were common (12/13) including
hypertension
(8), supravalvular aortic stenosis (9), aortic hypoplasia (3), pulmonic artery stenosis (4), peripheral stenoses (3), and mitral valve prolapse (2). Joint limitation (12/13) was progressive, often accompanied by kyphoscoliosis and lordosis. Recurrent urinary tract infections in 6 individuals led to radiologic studies showing urethral stenosis in 2, and bladder diverticula and vesicoureteral reflux in 3. Gastrointestinal problems included obesity (5), chronic constipation (7), diverticulosis (3), and cholelithiasis (4).
Hypercalcemia
was documented in 5 patients, although others had hypercalcemic symptoms (abdominal pain, polyuria, and constipation). One 45-year-old man had parathyroid hyperplasia. Previous reports likewise document significant morbidity. Thus, Williams syndrome in an adult appears to dictate aggressive evaluation and monitoring. Investigation of calcium metabolism should be undertaken in each adult WS patient.
...
PMID:Adults with Williams syndrome. 189 83
1. Blood pressure, left ventricular mass and platelet cytosolic free calcium concentrations were measured in 23 patients with untreated primary hyperparathyroidism, 30 normotensive control subjects and 23 control subjects matched for age, sex and blood pressure. In 12 patients measurements were repeated after parathyroidectomy. 2. Patients with primary hyperparathyroidism had significantly elevated blood pressures (139 +/- 6/86 +/- 3 mmHg, mean +/- SEM) compared with control subjects (125 +/- 2/78 +/- 1 mmHg), but high values persisted after
hypercalcaemia
was corrected. 3. Despite chronic extracellular
hypercalcaemia
, intracellular free calcium levels were lower in patients with hyperparathyroidism than in controls matched for age, sex and blood pressure (median concentrations 81.5 nmol/l vs 93 nmol/l, 95% confidence interval 0.1 to 20.1; P less than 0.05) and values tended to increase after parathyroidectomy. 4. Left ventricular mass index was increased in the primary hyperparathyroid group as compared with control subjects matched for age, sex and blood pressure (123 g/m2 vs 100 g/m2, 95% confidence interval -36.1 to -3.1; P = 0.03). Parathyroidectomy resulted in a small reduction of the left ventricular mass index (123.5 g/m2 vs 104 g/m2, 95% confidence interval 46.5 to 2.5; P = 0.1) but no change in blood pressure. 5.
Hypertension
and left ventricular hypertrophy in primary hyperparathyroidism are associated with relatively low levels of free calcium in platelets.
...
PMID:Blood pressure, left ventricular mass and intracellular calcium in primary hyperparathyroidism. 215 37
In recent years, diagnostic imaging techniques, especially ultrasonography (US) and CT scanning, have been widely adopted in clinical practice, making early accurate diagnosis of renal tumors possible. A total of 452 cases of renal tumors have been admitted to the institute since 1951, of which 220 were seen from 1951 to 1979 and 232 in the past 9 years (1980-1988). The frequency of renal parenchymal tumors was obviously higher in the latter group, including asymptomatic renal carcinoma in 20.2% and hamartoma in 38.1%. All these were discovered on routine physical check-up by ultrasonography and/or CT scanning and would otherwise have gone undiagnosed on conventional urography. Ultrasonography and CT can also reveal the nature and the extent of the tumor. The idea that "a renal tumor should be considered malignant unless pathologically proven otherwise" is no longer valid. However, general manifestations of renal carcinoma, such as elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR),
hypertension
, malaise, anemia, fever and
hypercalcemia
, still deserve proper attention. We suggest that ultrasonography of both kidneys should be mandatory in routine physical check-up, as far as the urinary system is concerned, in order to discover asymptomatic renal tumors.
...
PMID:Imaging techniques for the diagnosis of renal tumors. 224 36
Little notice has been paid in the surgical literature to problems with psychoeffective lithium, which by interfering with adenylate cyclase affects thyroid and parathyroid function, causing
hypercalcemia
, hyperparathyroidism, and hypothyroidism. Seven patients with lithiumogenic hyperparathyroidism occurring after years of lithium therapy underwent treatment and manifested osteoporosis (n = 2),
hypertension
(n = 2), nephrolithiasis (n = 1), coma (n = 1), rising
hypercalcemia
(n = 1), goitrous myxedema (n = 4), nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (n = 2), renal failure (n = 2), and hyperlipidemia (n = 1). Disease-directed parathyroidectomy (without morbidity) was curative. Unique laboratory findings included normal serum phosphorus and reduced urinary calcium and cyclic adenosine monophosphate values. Three separate cases of thyroid carcinoma after long-term lithium therapy were also treated, being preceded by myxedema (n = 2) and concurrent with hyperparathyroidism (n = 1). There has been only one previous report of lithium-associated thyroid carcinoma. All patients taking lithium should undergo surveillance for thyroid and parathyroid dysfunction and neoplasia, and appropriate surgical and medical treatment should be considered in each situation. Although hyperparathyroidism may be reversible with lithium discontinuance, such therapy may be obligatory for patient well-being, thus dictating parathyroidectomy.
...
PMID:Lithiumogenic disorders of the thyroid and parathyroid glands as surgical disease. 224 24
Returning to the patient presented today, perhaps we can now understand some of his findings. As I noted, men are more likely to demonstrate alterations in calcium metabolism associated with elevations in blood pressure. Furthermore, blacks are more likely than whites to develop hyperparathyroidism, particularly in the third and fourth decades of life. It is unlikely, however, that parathyroid hormone was responsible for the increase in this patient's arterial pressure because PTH has a vasodilating action. Moreover, the long-term response to parathyroidectomy is more likely to be an increase rather than a decrease in blood pressure. It is also unlikely that the mild elevations in the serum total calcium observed in this patient were responsible for his
hypertension
. Correction of
hypercalcemia
by surgical intervention failed to improve the blood pressure. There is little evidence that mild, protracted
hypercalcemia
can account for increases in arterial pressure. Finally, the patient's alcohol abuse might have contributed to his elevated blood pressure; it is possible that his
hypertension
was in part a reflection of the abnormal calcium metabolism he developed as a consequence of the alcohol abuse. Answers to some questions we faced when we first studied this patient more than a decade ago can be provided by the wealth of basic research and clinical investigation that has occurred since. We now know that calcium metabolism is a factor in blood pressure regulation in some humans and in some experimental models. Epidemiologic studies document a consistent association between lower dietary calcium intake and higher blood pressures in humans. An additional non-pharmacologic approach has been identified that can produce a modest but important lowering of blood pressure in a subset of hypertensive individuals. Much data show that calcium-regulating hormones have important cardiovascular actions that might account for some of the mechanisms by which increased dietary calcium lowers blood pressure. Research in this area also has set the stage for exploring another theoretical mechanism for sodium-chloride-sensitive
hypertension
. Finally, a theoretical mechanism(s) has emerged that could provide a pathophysiologic link between
hypertension
and certain high-risk populations such as blacks, the elderly, type-II diabetics, and pregnant women. The principal clinical implication derived from this work to date is the following: In patients with mild to moderate
hypertension
, the level of dietary calcium intake should be assessed. Patients whose intake is deficient should be encouraged simply to maintain calcium intake at 800 to 1000 mg/day.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Calcium metabolism and hypertension. 254 Mar 74
The aim of this study was to assess the effect of
hypercalcaemia
due to primary hyperparathyroidism on the pressor and aldosterone responses to angiotensin II (Ang II) infusion. Five patients with hyperparathyroidism were studied, before and after parathyroidectomy, and were compared with five normal subjects. After 30 min of equilibration, Asp1-Val5 Ang II was infused in all subjects at stepwise increasing dose rates of 2 and 4 ng/kg per min for 30 min each. In the hyperparathyroid patients the baseline levels of plasma parathyroid hormone and calcium were significantly higher than in the controls, and returned to normal after the parathyroidectomy; plasma aldosterone and renin activity were normal both before and after the parathyroidectomy. Two hyperparathyroid patients had
high blood pressure
levels, which were normalized after surgery. The increase in the aldosterone response from baseline at each time point of the Ang II infusion was greater in the hyperparathyroid patients before than after the operation (P less than 0.05), and greater than in the normals (P less than 0.05). No difference in the increased response of systolic or diastolic blood pressure was observed between the hyperparathyroid patients, either before or after the parathyroidectomy, and the normal subjects. High levels of extracellular calcium or parathyroid hormone, or both, might play a primary role in the aldosterone hyper-responsiveness to Ang II in the hyperparathyroid patients. The similar pressor response to Ang II in hyperparathyroid patients and the normal subjects suggests that
hypercalcaemia
does not potentiate the vasoconstrictive action of Ang II.
...
PMID:Aldosterone and pressor responses to angiotensin II in primary hyperparathyroidism. 263 14
This review critically analyzes the available information on the relationship among calcium, parathyroid hormone, and blood pressure regulation. Both acute and chronic
hypercalcemia
increase blood pressure primarily via direct effects on vascular smooth muscle contractility. The evidence for indirect effects through activation of hormonal pressor systems is inconclusive. In apparent contrast with the notion that
hypercalcemia
can cause
hypertension
, more recently it has been proposed that calcium deficiency may be important in the genesis of
hypertension
both in humans and in spontaneously hypertensive animals. However, the evidence supporting this notion is still conflicting. Parathyroid hormone exerts complex actions on the cardiovascular system. On one hand, if injected in pharmacological doses, it is a vasodilator and antagonizes the pressor action of norepinephrine and angiotensin II; on the other hand, parathyroid hormone can potentiate the pressor effect of
hypercalcemia
.
...
PMID:Calcium, parathyroid hormone, and blood pressure. 264 6
We studied long-term morbidity after parathyroid surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism in 100 patients and compared it with the long-term morbidity of medical follow-up from the literature. The surgical treatment of primary hyperparathyroidism was associated with negative results of neck explorations, persistent
hypercalcemia
, recurrent
hypercalcemia
, permanent hypoparathyroidism, or recurrent laryngeal nerve damage in 13 (19%) of 68 patients followed up for five years postoperatively. A review of medical follow-up as reported in the literature showed progression of disease in 8% to 22% of patients followed up for five to ten years. There was no convincing evidence that mild primary hyperparathyroidism resulted in progressive osteoporosis or renal failure. Furthermore, no significant improvement in
hypertension
, peptic ulcer disease, or renal function followed successful parathyroid surgery. Unless future studies demonstrate progressive osteoporosis or renal damage in untreated, mild primary hyperparathyroidism, medical follow-up is a reasonable alternative to surgery in the compliant patient over 50 years of age.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism. A review of the long-term surgical and nonsurgical morbidities as a basis for a rational approach to treatment. 270 30
Sixty-one consecutive patients were examined to determine the current mode of presentation of primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT). Of these patients, 37.7% were asymptomatic, and the initial indication of pHPT was
hypercalcemia
, which was found unexpectedly on biochemical screening of the serum in elderly patients.
Hypertension
was twice as common among patients with pHPT as in the general population (36.1%). The next most common presentations were urinary calculi (18%) and mental depression (18%). The most useful discriminant laboratory tests were serum calcium, phosphorus, chloride, and parathormone (PTH). The calculated coefficient of correlation of PTH to land weight was high (r = 0.571, p less than 0.001). There was very significant correlation between PTH and seriousness of bone disease (r = 0.620, p less than 0.001). After parathyroidectomy, 3.3% of patients remained hypercalcemic, 93% were normocalcemic, and 1.6% were hypocalcemic.
...
PMID:Clinical and biochemical features in primary hyperparathyroidism. 291 78
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