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)

A patient initially showed symptoms of peptic ulcer disease in 1953 and was later found to have hypercalcemia and hyperparathyroidism. Peptic ulcer symptoms persisted after parathyroidectomy, and results of studies provided evidence of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Evaluation of the patient's family showed a classic pattern of multiple endocrine adenomatosis type 1. The patient underwent total gastrectomy and excision of a gastrin cell adenoma in 1971 with relief of symptoms, but with persistent hypergastrinemia. He remained in good health until January 1976, when symptoms of hypoglycemia developed. Results of laboratory studies were compatible with the diagnosis of a pancreatic beta-cell adenoma. At the time of operation, an adenoma of the head of the pancreas was found. The tumor was excised; no other metastatic tumors were found. The tumor was compatible with a beta-cell adenoma and was found to contain high concentrations of insulin; there was no important amount of gastrin. Symptoms of hypoglycemia have entirely disappeared.
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PMID:Separate pancreatic gastrin cell and beta-cell adenomas: report of a patient with multiple endocrine adenomatosis type 1. 3 17

A localized, transplantable testicular tumor of the Fischer rat regularly produces hypercalcemia and increased phosphorus clearance in host animals. Light and electron microscopic examinations of the tumor indicate that it is of Leydig origin. There is no evidence that the tumor secretes any biologically active sex steroids, judges by weights of target tissues, when the tumor is grown in castrated or spayed rats. No radioactive steroid hormone formation in vitro was detected using 1-14C-acetate as a precursor although 14C was incorporated into the "C27" sterol fraction. Mass (micrograms) amounts of sex steroids were not detected after purifying large amounts of tumor extracts. The phytosterols, beta-sitosterol, stigmasterol, campesterol, were tentatively identified in tumor extracts but were also found in other tissues and in tumors not associated with hypercalcemia. Administered in vivo, human chorionic gonadotropin caused an acute rise in serum calcium in 3 to 5 hours in tumor-bearing hypercalcemic rats. Only trophic hormones with luteinizing hormone activity were found to compete with 125I-human chorionic gonadotropin for binding to the tumor homogenate in vitro indicating the tumor possessed luteinizing hormone receptors. When the tumor was transplanted intrasplenically, hypercalcemia did not occur unless adhesions formed, suggesting that the tumor hormone was rapidly metabolized by the liver and was probably of small molecular weight. Secretory granules, usually thought to be associated with peptide hormone secretion, were not detected at the ultrastructure level. Cortisol, conjugated estrogen, and an inhibitor of sterol biosynthesis (AY-9944) were effective in lowering the elevated serum calcium. Definitive identification of the agent causing lethal hypercalcemia has not been accomplished. The available data suggest it is not parathyroid hormone or vitamin D. The Leydig cell origin of the tumor, its response to human chorionic gonadotropin in vivo, the lack of secretory granules at the ultrastructural level, and biologic characteristics, all lead to the speculation that the secretory product of the tumor is a new hormonal substance, possibly a steroid precursor or related substance not previously described or is a known substance of small molecular weight whose calcium-mobilizing properties have not been fully characterized. This transplantable tumor may represent a model for one form of neoplastic hypercalcemia occurring in man and may have important implications in the general area of calcium and phosphorus homeostasis.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia and neoplasia. Biologic, biochemical, and ultrastructural studies of a hypercalcemia-producing Leydig cell tumor of the rat. 5 57

Although hypercalcemia may be caused by extraparathyroid disease and controlled with various medications, acute hypercalcemic crisis is a surgical emergency. All nonperative measures are directed toward diagnosis of hyperparathyroidism and preparation for operation. Parathyroidectomy is indicated even in the absence of definite evidence of a functioning parathyroid tumor in patients when nonoperative methods fail. Prompt medical therapy and timely surgical intervention will result in success in the vast majority of patients with hypercalcemic crises.
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PMID:Acute hypercalcemic crisis. 13 13

A patient with metastatic islet cell carcinoma of the pancreas, recurrent peptic ulcer disease, and hypergastrinemia (Zollinger-Ellison syndrome) developed symptomatic hypercalcemia and renal insufficiency; she was treated with streptozotocin after parathyroidectomy failed to control her hypercalcemia. Shortly after somewhat less than the usual recommended dose of streptozotocin was administered, the serum calcium concentration fell to near normal with complete resolution of symptoms. Seven months after therapy, mild hypocalcemia, consistent with her degree of renal impairment was noted. However, mild hypercalcemia recurred 13 months after therapy. Shortly after streptozotocin therapy, the mean serum gastrin concentration fell to near normal with radiographic disappearance of the anastomotic ulcer. At 7 and 13 months after therapy, serum gastrin levels were normal. Streptozotocin therapy was accomplished without major complications; specifically, without a detrimental effect on the creatinine clearance. Thus, although hypercalcemia in patients with pancreatic islet cell tumors is often due to associated primary hyperparathyroidism, in some patients it may be due to secretion of a hypercalcemic substance from the tumor and may respond to streptozotocin. Similarly, hypergastrinemia in patients with islet cell tumors may also respond to streptozotocin.
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PMID:Pancreatic islet cell carcinoma with hypercalcemia and hypergastrinemia: response to streptozotocin. 13 70

We studied two children with neuroblastoma in whom hypercalcemia developed as the initial manifestation in one and during the course of therapy in the other. Serum parathyroid hormone activity was elevated in the patient in whom the test for it was performed. Mithramycin controlled the hypercalcemia in one patient and tumor resection with radiation therapy and chemotherapy was sufficient for control of this complication in the other.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia associated with neuroblastoma. 15 70

Hypercalcemia calls first for supportive measures, eg, adequate hydration, movement or mobilization of the patient to the greatest amount tolerated, and reevaluation of drugs being taken. When immediate lowering of the serum calcium level is not clinically mandatory, oral administration of furosemide, corticosteroid, or phosphorus should be considered. In acute emergencies, saline loading and parenteral furosemide therapy should be tried first, except in a patient with renal failure and congestive heart failure, in whom peritoneal dialysis or hemodialysis should be used instead. Calcitonin can be given for the first 12 to 24 hours to lower serum calcium concentration until a definitive management plan is formulated. Corticosteroid, if not contraindicated, should be started as soon as possible. In severe primary hyperparathyroidism with hypophosphatemia, phosphorus can be given intravenously until oral phosphate therapy can be established. Surgery, of course, should be performed as soon as possible. In most cases of neoplasia, mithramycin given according to a recommended schedule is safe and frequently effective. In desperate cases, additional use of prostaglandin synthesis inhibitors probably now is justified by empirical observations. All of these therapeutic measures are used only to stabilize electrolyte balance so that the primary cause of the hypercalcemia can be treated.
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PMID:Management of hypercalcemia. 15 84

The authors report two cases of multiple myeloma which were typical both clinically and in the laboratory but XRay examination, on the other hand, showed appearances of osteocondensation. In the first case, XRay showed both lesions of osteolysis in the cranial vault and homogeneous condensation of D11 and L1, together with the left iliac crest. In the other case, there was osteolysis of the acetabulum together with areas of osteocondensation distributed throughout the pelvis and upper ends of the femurs, with two areas of annular fibrosis circumscribing the area of osteolysis, finally, homogeneous condensation of the skull. In both cases, bone biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of multiple myeloma showing both osteofibrosis and plasma cell infiltration of the bone marrow. This also permitted the authors to note the absence of any myelofibrosis or metamorphic neo-osteogenesis. Illustrated by these two cases, condensing multiple myeloma is a rare entity, the special clinical characteristics of which reside in its fairly frequent coexistence with peripheral neuritis which is probably similar to a para-neoplastic syndrome. The radiological appearances are mainly of four types: 1) Focal areas of bony condensation. 2) Areas of annular fibrosis circumscribing osteolysis. 3) Appearances of radial spicules, or 4) Osteocondensation extending to a fairly large part of the skeleton. The laboratory signs are identical with those in other types of multiple myeloma with a few exceptions, such as, rareness of hypercalcemia, more frequent tendency to hypocalcemia, rise in alkaline phosphatase, in a few cases. Bone biopsy confirms the diagnosis. The osteofibrosis resulted here from thickening of the osteoid seams by laying down of successive layers of bony substance, irregularly calcified and, also secondarily, metamorphic neo-osteogenesis in a few rare cases which also included myelofibrosis.
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PMID:[Myeloma and osteocondensation (apropos of 2 cases)]. 16 41

Hypercalcemia is very uncommon in small cell (oat cell) carcinoma of the lung. Two cases of this neoplasm associated with symptomatic hypercalcemia are described. Despite normal skeletal roentgenograms, metastatic bone disease was demonstrated by abnormal bone scans and bone biopsies in both patients. The combination of conventional antihypercalcemia therapy, cytotoxic cancer chemotherapy, and synthetic salmon calcitonin corrected the hypercalcemia despite progression of the small cell carcinoma. One patient with elevated serum immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (PTH) had a parathyroid adenoma at autopsy. This association emphasizes that in cases of bronchogenic small cell carcinoma with hypercalcemia, conincidental primary hyperparathyroidism should be considered.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia in small cell (oat cell) carcinoma of the lung. Coincident parathyroid adenoma in one case. 17 Oct 50

A case of watery diarrhea, hypokalemia and hypercalcemia associated with an islet cell tumor was described. A 62-year old man exhibited frequent watery diarrhea and hypokalemia for two years. He had no peptic ulcer and serum gastrin level was normal. His serum calcium was abnormally high and serum phosphate was lowered. He had secretin-like activity in his plasma. Autopsy revealed a small islet cell tumor in the pancreas and several metastatic masses in the liver. Microscopic examination revealed the tumor cell was not beta, alpha nor D cells. By electron microscopy the secretion granules of the tumor cell resembled those of S, M and T cells. It was not possible to decide which of the tree cell types was responsible for the pancreatic cholera.
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PMID:A case of watery diarrhea, hypokalemia and hypercalcemia associated with nonulcerogenic islet cell tumor of the pancreas. 17 23

Lung tumors, among other, secrete substances which are identical to or which mimic the activities of conventional hormones. These ectopic tumor secretions appear to be anarchistic and beyond the control of mechanisms regulating normal endocrine physiology. Despite the relative inefficiency of these tumors as endocrine organs, production of sufficient quantities of the substance, exceeding those from normal sources, results in recognizable ectopic endocrinopathies. The association of certain tumor cell types with specific hormonal patterns (Cushing syndrome with oat cell; hypercalcemia with squamous cell) is considered consistent with the concept of genetic derepression.
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PMID:Extrapulmonary manifestations of tumors of the lung. 20 3


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