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

Symptomatic osteopenia accompanied by subclinical hyperthyroidism developed in three women who were receiving excess thyroid hormone medication. Excessive thyroid replacement therapy resulted in mild hypercalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, and hyperphosphatasemia associated with diffuse skeletal demineralization and multiple fractures. Nondecalcified sections of double tetracycline-labeled iliac crest bone showed an accelerated rate of bone turnover with marked osteoclastosis and resorption of the cortical as well as the trabecular bone, typical of endogenous hyperthyroidism. Since thyroid hormones are among the most frequently prescribed medications, bone loss caused by exogenous hyperthyroidism may be more common than previously recognized.
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PMID:Exogenous hyperthyroidism with osteoporosis. 683 Mar 80

A 22-year-old woman developed hypoparathyroidism in 1970, 10 months after treatment of hyperthyroidism with I-131. The hypocalcemia was corrected with Vitamin D2 and oral calcium and she remained normocalcemic for 8 yr. In 1979 hypercalcemia was found and Vitamin D2/calcium was discontinued. Because she remained normocalcemic without therapy for 3 yr, we measured the levels of immunoreactive and bioactive PTH in plasma stored since 1970 and in plasma obtained in 1982 to determine whether there had been restoration of parathyroid function. Indeed, PTH levels in 1970 while the patient was hypocalcemic were low. The bioactive PTH was 0.26 pg/ml (normal 1.5-30), whereas--COOH terminal immunoreactive PTH was 620 pg/ml (normal 600-1500) and midmolecule immunoreactive PTH was 433 pg/ml (normal 300-900). In 1982 while normocalcemic the bioactive PTH and immunoreactive PTH were normal (5.18 pg/ml;--COOH, 970 pg/ml; midmolecule, 789 pg/ml, respectively). Thus, an unusual case of hypoparathyroidism after I-131 therapy with return of parathyroid function is documented by measurements of both immunoreactive and bioactive PTH.
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PMID:Hypoparathyroidism after I-131 therapy with subsequent return of parathyroid function. 686 81

The patient, a 30-year-old woman, was admitted to Itoh Hospital in February, 1979 for hyperthyroidism. She had a history of pyelonephritis and recurrent urinary tract infection. Laboratory data on admission revealed overt hyperthyroidism (T3: 405 ng/dl, T4: 22.5 micrograms/dl and T3U: 57.--%), severe hypercalcemia of 12.6 mg/dl and hypercalciuria. The PSP excretion and GFR were both decreased. Serum c-PTH was nondetectable. As the thyroid function improved, there was a gradual decrease and later normalization of plasma calcium, phosphate and urinary calcium excretion. When subtotal thyroidectomy was performed on October 19, 1979, hypertrophy of the parathyroid gland was not demonstrated. In comparison with 98 other hyperthyroid patients, the pathogenesis of hypercalcemia was discussed. In conclusion, hypercalcemia in the patient, T. Y., was regarded as a kind of disequilibrium hypercalcemia which resulted from a combination of increased bone turnover and decreased calcium excretion by the kidney.
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PMID:A case report on disequilibrium hypercalcemia in hyperthyroidism. Comparison of calcium metabolism with other patients with hyperthyroidism. 717 16

Hyperthyroidism is often associated with hypercalcemia which is provoked by osteoclastic activity of the thyroid hormones. These data show that hypercalcemia develops with increasing age and in the presence of a special type of hyperthyroid goiter. Total serum calcium, total protein, and albumin as well as different parameters of thyroid function, namely T3 RIA1, T4 test, ETR and TRH test were determined in a group of 147 patients. The ionized calcium level was estimated from total calcium and albumin. 211 measurements were performed. Hyperthyroidism existed in 92 cases. Total calcium was not significantly elevated in hyperthyroidism. Hyperthyroid patients under 61 years of age showed elevated ionized calcium levels in only 2.3% and patients over 60 years of age in 18.8% of cases. Elevated ionized serum calcium levels were observed in 43.8% of hyperthyroid patients with multinodular goiters. The linear correlation between ionized calcium levels and different parameters of thyroid function is much more pronounced in the older group and it was found to be highly significant. 7 of 9 hyperthyroid patients with elevated ionized calcium levels showed multinodular goiters, though no autonomous adenoma. In the hyperthyroid group of patients of over 60 years of age with multinodular goiters the incidence of hypercalcemia was 43.8%. Direct action of thyroid hormone on calcium turnover as well as increasing age and special goiter type seem to be responsible for disturbances in calcium metabolism. A possible calcitonin deficiency in the above mentioned conditions is discussed.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia in hyperthyroidism. Role of age and goiter type. 723 Jul 26

A 53-year-old woman presented a clinical picture of hypercalcemia as the first and most prominent manifestation of hyperthyroidism. The possibility of a coexistent hyperparathyroidism was excluded, as well as any other potential cause of hypercalcemia. The hypercalcemia and its clinical manifestations disappeared a month after the antithyroid therapy was started. After 2 years, the calcemia and renal and thyroid functions continue normal. The association of hyperthyroidism and hypercalcemia is well known, but only rarely is hypercalcemia responsible for prominent clinical symptoms. It is very infrequent for the manifestations of hypercalcemia to precede those of hyperthyroidism.
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PMID:[Hypercalcemia as first manifestation of thyrotoxicosis (author's transl)]. 736 71

A totally thyroidectomized patient with thyroid and parathyroid carcinomas, which had developed after neck irradiation in childhood, became hypercalcemic due to pulmonary metastases. The hypercalcemia was ameliorated by intermittent iv administration of bisphosphonate for 3.5 years, but this gradually became refractory to the bisphosphonate treatment. After right thoracotomy for resection of pulmonary metastases, acute necrotizing pancreatitis developed. The patient was therefore placed on total parenteral nutrition supplemented with T4 and a restricted dose of magnesium. Thyroxine(T4) (30 micrograms/day, iv) was not sufficient to maintain euthyroidism, but a higher dose (60 micrograms/day) elicited mild hyperthyroidism to the same extent as that elicited by an oral dose of 100 micrograms/day. The present case showed that the appropriate iv dose of T4 in this thyroidectomized patient with acute pancreatitis was about 60% of the oral dose. Furthermore, bisphosphonates (pamidronate and alendronate) and magnesium depletion were very effective in controlling the hypercalcemia.
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PMID:Appropriate intravenous doses of L-thyroxine and magnesium in a thyroidectomized patient with thyroid and parathyroid carcinomas receiving total parenteral nutrition during acute necrotizing pancreatitis. 778 23

Hypercalcemia may be a manifestation of a variety of disorders including hyperparathyroidism, hypervitaminosis D, sarcoidosis, multiple myeloma, hyperthyroidism, acute osteoporosis, metastatic bone disease, and a number of primary malignancies. Hypercalcemia may be seen in as many as 1.5% of all patients with malignant disease, with or without bony metastases. The neoplasms most commonly associated with hypercalcemia include carcinoma of the lung (all cell types), breast cancer, squamous cell carcinomas, hematologic malignancies, and renal cell carcinoma. Observation of a number of instances of hypercalcemia attendant on urologic malignancies prompts the brief report of 4 characteristic cases with documentation of response to therapy. Management of severe and debilitating hypercalcemia is emphasized. Urologists should be aware of new agents available for such treatment.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia and urologic malignancies. 781 68

We describe a young woman with lymphocytic hypophysitis presenting in the early post-partum period. She had selective corticotroph failure causing secondary adrenal insufficiency. At the time of presentation she had transient hyperthyroidism due to thyroiditis, and hypercalcaemia. This is the third case to be described of hypercalcaemia occurring in association with lymphocytic hypophysitis. Hypercalcaemia is not a recognized complication of other forms of pituitary failure. The two previously described cases also had selective corticotroph failure and hyperthyroidism due to thyroiditis. This pattern of presentation supports the concept that thyroid hormone action in the presence of glucocorticoid deficiency is responsible for the increased calcium efflux from bone into the circulation. Reduced renal excretion of calcium due to a reduction in calcium delivery to the glomerulus and increased proximal tubular reabsorption are also implicated in the aetiology of hypercalcaemia associated with adrenal failure.
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PMID:Secondary hypoadrenalism presenting with hypercalcaemia. 788 23

A 24-year-old man with anorexia, repeated bouts of vomiting, and wasting was found to have florid thyrotoxicosis and hypercalcaemia. Pamidronate promptly reduced the serum calcium concentration to normal, and simultaneously abated the abdominal symptoms, which did not recur in spite of continuing severe hyperthyroidism, which was eventually controlled by radioactive iodine ablation of thyroid activity.
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PMID:Abdominal symptoms, hypercalcaemia and apathetic hyperthyroidism: treatment with pamidronate. 774 97

When mild asymptomatic hypercalcemia occurs in a patient with hyperthyroidism, it may or may not be due to concurrent hyperparathyroidism and at times only the control of the hyperthyroidism will resolve the problem. Moreover, the presence of hyperfunctioning thyroid nodules will interfere with Tl-201/Tc-99m pertechnetate parathyroid scintigraphy. Initial treatment of hyperthyroidism with I-131 in this situation controls hyperthyroidism and permits successful localization of parathyroid adenomas, which may then be excised--a result that was achieved in three cases.
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PMID:Concurrent Plummer's disease and parathyroid adenoma. Diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to a difficult clinical problem. 806 69


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