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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (
hypercalcemia
)
10,293
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Seminomas are germ cell tumors that are rarely associated with
hypercalcemia
. In this report, four cases of seminoma with concomitant
hypercalcemia
are presented and another three from the literature are reviewed. All seven patients exhibited
hypercalcemia
with a normal serum concentration of inorganic phosphorus and no evidence of skeletal metastases. The peripheral venous level of parathyroid hormone (PTH) was normal in four of the five patients in whom it was measured. The serum concentration of calcitriol was elevated in the two patients in whom it was measured. After systemic chemotherapy, the serum "corrected" total calcium concentration returned to normal and remained normal; the decrease in the levels temporally paralleled the decrease in tumor volume. Both patients with elevated calcitriol levels remained eucalcemic after treatment of the malignancy, suggesting that the increased serum calcitriol level was linked to the development of
hypercalcemia
as this humoral agent was inappropriately elevated by patients with this syndrome. In contrast to many forms of malignancy, the development of
hypercalcemia
did not adversely affect the prognosis of the patients with seminoma, since all seven patients entered complete remission.
Hypercalcemia
appears to be heretofore unrecognized
paraneoplastic syndrome
associated with seminoma.
...
PMID:Humoral hypercalcemia in seminomas. 137 70
A premenopausal woman developed
hypercalcemia
30 months after treatment for infiltrating breast cancer. After bone metastases had been excluded, primary hyperparathyroidism was suspected. A parathyroid adenoma was removed and histologically confirmed.
Hypercalcemia
, associated with low plasma phosphate and severely depressed plasma parathormone (PTH) levels, persisted. Further investigations showed liver metastases from the primary breast cancer and also secretion of a PTH-like substance. Antitumoral treatment was effective on the liver metastases and also normalized calcemia and the PTH-like substance, demonstrating the existence of a
paraneoplastic syndrome
related to the secretion of a PTH-like substance by disseminated liver metastases of primary breast cancer.
...
PMID:Hypercalcemia and breast cancer related to parathormone-like secretion by liver metastases. 146 5
A premenopausal woman developed
hypercalcemia
30 months after treatment for infiltrating breast cancer. After bone metastases had been excluded, primary hyper parathyroidism was suspected. A parathyroid adenoma was removed and histologically confirmed.
Hypercalcemia
persisted, associated with low plasma phosphate and severely depressed plasma parathormone (PTH) levels. Further investigations showed liver metastases from the primary breast cancer and also secretion of a PTH-like substance. Anti-tumoral treatment was effective on the liver metastases and also normalized calcemia and the PTH-like substance, demonstrating the existence of a
paraneoplastic syndrome
related to the secretion of a PTH-like substance by disseminated liver metastases of primary breast cancer.
...
PMID:[Malignant hypercalcemia after treatment of breast cancer]. 146 33
Clinicopathological aspects of equine leukosis are discussed in a review. Among various other findings, only
hypercalcaemia
accompanied by
paraneoplastic syndrome
in the course of equine leukosis, increased values of alkaline phosphatase as usual in tumorous diseases, and hypalbuminaemia and hypergammaglobulinaemia in mesentric and intestinal forms of equine leukosis seem to have some diagnostic and pathogenetic significance. Changed values of further parameters are more or less non-specific concomitant signs, indicating that other organs or organ systems have been affected. However, in case of suspicion of equine leukosis furthermore clinicopathological investigations are recommended particularly for differential-diagnostic reasons.
...
PMID:[Clinical chemistry in leukosis of horses (review)]. 159 67
Squamous, large cell, and adenocarcinoma, collectively termed non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), are diagnosed in approximately 75% of patients with lung cancer in the United States. The treatment of these three tumor cell types is approached in virtually identical fashion because, in contrast to small cell carcinoma of the lung, NSCLC more frequently presents with localized disease at the time of diagnosis and is thus more often amenable to surgical resection but less frequently responds to chemotherapy and irradiation. Cigarette smoking is etiologically related to the development of NSCLC in the great majority of cases. Genetic mutations in dominant oncogenes such as K-ras, loss of genetic material on chromosomes 3p, 11p, and 17p, and deletions or mutations in tumor suppressor genes such as rb and p53 have been documented in NSCLC tumors and tumor cell lines. NSCLC is diagnosed because of symptoms related to the primary tumor or regional or distant metastases, as an incidental finding on chest radiograph, or rarely because of a
paraneoplastic syndrome
such as
hypercalcemia
or hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy. Screening smokers with periodic chest radiographs and sputum cytologic examination has not been shown to reduce mortality. The diagnosis of NSCLC is usually established by fiberoptic bronchoscopy or percutaneous fine-needle aspiration, by biopsy of a regional or distant metastatic site, or at the time of thoracotomy. Pathologically, NSCLC arises in a setting of bronchial mucosal metaplasia and dysplasia that progressively increase over time. Squamous carcinoma more often presents as a central endobronchial lesion, while large cell and adenocarcinoma have a tendency to arise in the lung periphery and invade the pleura. Once the diagnosis is made, the extent of tumor dissemination is determined. Since most NSCLC patients who survive 5 years or longer have undergone surgical resection of their cancers, the focus of the staging process is to determine whether the patient is a candidate for thoracotomy with curative intent. The dominant prognostic factors in NSCLC are extent of tumor dissemination, ambulatory or performance status, and degree of weight loss. Stages I and II NSCLC, which are confined within the pleural reflection, are managed by surgical resection whenever possible, with approximate 5-year survival of 45% and 25%, respectively. Patients with stage IIIa cancers, in which the primary tumor has extended through the pleura or metastasized to ipsilateral or subcarinal lymph nodes, can occasionally be surgically resected but are often managed with definitive thoracic irradiation and have 5-year survival of approximately 15%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Non-small cell lung cancer. Part I: Biology, diagnosis, and staging. 164 34
Squamous, large cell, and adenocarcinoma, collectively termed non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), are diagnosed in approximately 75% of patients with lung cancer in the United States. The treatment of these three tumor cell types is approached in virtually identical fashion because, in contrast to small cell carcinoma of the lung, NSCLC more frequently presents with localized disease at the time of diagnosis and is thus more often amenable to surgical resection but less frequently responds to chemotherapy and irradiation. Cigarette smoking is etiologically related to the development of NSCLC in the great majority of cases. Genetic mutations in dominant oncogenes such as K-ras, loss of genetic material on chromosomes 3p, 11p, and 17p, and deletions or mutations in tumor suppressor genes such as rb and p53 have been documented in NSCLC tumors and tumor cell lines. NSCLC is diagnosed because of symptoms related to the primary tumor or regional or distant metastases, as an incidental finding on chest radiograph, or rarely because of a
paraneoplastic syndrome
such as
hypercalcemia
or hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy. Screening smokers with periodic chest radiographs and sputum cytologic examination has not been shown to reduce mortality. The diagnosis of NSCLC is usually established by fiberoptic bronchoscopy or percutaneous fine-needle aspiration, by biopsy of a regional or distant metastatic site, or at the time of thoracotomy. Pathologically, NSCLC arises in a setting of bronchial mucosal metaplasia and dysplasia that progressively increase over time. Squamous carcinoma more often presents as a central endobronchial lesion, while large cell and adenocarcinoma have a tendency to arise in the lung periphery and invade the pleura. Once the diagnosis is made, the extent of tumor dissemination is determined. Since most NSCLC patients who survive 5 years or longer have undergone surgical resection of their cancers, the focus of the staging process is to determine whether the patient is a candidate for thoracotomy with curative intent. The dominant prognostic factors in NSCLC are extent of tumor dissemination, ambulatory or performance status, and degree of weight loss. Stages I and II NSCLC, which are confined within the pleural reflection, are managed by surgical resection whenever possible, with approximate 5-year survival of 45% and 25%, respectively. Patients with stage IIIa cancers, in which the primary tumor has extended through the pleura or metastasized to ipsilateral or subcarinal lymph nodes, can occasionally be surgically resected but are often managed with definitive thoracic irradiation and have 5-year survival of approximately 15%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Non-small cell lung cancer. Part II: Treatment. 171 39
Tumors of the female genital tract may be associated with a variety of unusual clinical manifestations. Uncommon endocrine and paraendocrine syndromes include production of human chorionic gonadotropin by tumors other than those of germ cell origin, hyperthyroidism associated with struma ovarii and gestational trophoblastic disease, the carcinoid syndrome, the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome,
hypercalcemia
, Cushing's syndrome, hypoglycemia, hypertension related to renin or aldosterone production, hyperprolactinemia, inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone, and virilization associated with Nelson's syndrome and placental site trophoblastic tumor.
Paraneoplastic syndromes
associated with gynecological tumors include disorders of the nervous system, connective tissue, and skin, as well as hematologic abnormalities and the nephrotic syndrome. Heritable and other congenital syndromes associated with these tumors are the Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, the nevoid basal-cell carcinoma syndrome, Ollier's disease and Maffucci's syndrome, hereditary leiomyomatosis, ataxia-telangiectasia, von Hippel-Lindau's disease, thyroid abnormalities associated with Sertoli-Leydig cell tumors, and Carney's complex. Other syndromes associated with tumors of the female genital tract include Meigs' syndrome, hyperamylasemia, uveal melanocytic lesions, and pyrexia.
...
PMID:Clinical syndromes associated with tumors of the female genital tract. 175 57
Metabolic disturbances of Na, K, Ca and glucose as
paraneoplastic syndrome
were reviewed on the basis of recent progress of such areas. These abnormalities usually occur due to the production of hormones or other physiologically active substances by tumor tissues. Hyponatremia is the most common abnormality of Na metabolism in patients with cancers such as lung cancer, malignant lymphoma, thymoma and so on. Usual cause of hyponatremia as
paraneoplastic syndrome
is inadequate secretion of Antidiuretic Hormone (SIADH), which brings dilution hyponatremia associated with water intoxication. Recently hyponatremia due to abnormal secretion of atrial natriuretic peptide has been noted. Ca metabolism disturbance associated with cancer is usually observed as
hypercalcemia
and it is said that such
hypercalcemia
is seen in about 10% of cancer patients. Main cause of
hypercalcemia
associated with cancer is local osteolytic
hypercalcemia
(LOH) due to bone metastasis or humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy (HHM). The most common etiology of HHM is the production of Parathormone (PTH) related peptide (PTH-rP) massively secreted from cancer tissues. PTH-rP has been recently well investigated and its molecular, mRNA and gene structure have been already determined. The progress of this area is very rapid and PTH-rP will be assayed in the clinical laboratory in near future. As for glucose metabolism disturbance as
paraneoplastic syndrome
, hypoglycemia is the most common abnormality. This type of hypoglycemia has been noted in relation with excessive production of somatomedin.
...
PMID:[Metabolic disturbance as paraneoplastic syndrome]. 182 8
The intravenous administration of Clodronate, a strong inhibitor of osteoclastic activity provides a safe and very effective treatment of
hypercalcemia
whether secondary to bone metastasis or due to
paraneoplastic syndrome
. Its action is fast, exclusively osseous and lasts up to 7 days. The response is incomplete when increased renal absorption is the predominant mechanism of
hypercalcemia
. The data published by Elomaa et al on osteolytic metastases in breast cancer patients show a significant improvement with regard to pain reduction, prevention of fractures as well as
hypercalcemia
. The results obtained using a 1-yr oral treatment need further confirmation.
...
PMID:[Value of Clodronate in the treatment of bone metastasis]. 183 87
To elucidate the actual incidence of
hypercalcemia
in patients with esophageal carcinoma, 382 consecutive cases admitted to the National Cancer Center Hospital (Tokyo, Japan) from 1983 to 1988 were investigated.
Hypercalcemia
was detected in 5 patients of 376 (1.3%) at the time of primary detection of cancer, and in 45 patients of 120 (38%) patients with recurrent or unresectable cancer who were monitored within 2 months of death. These observations demonstrated that this electrolyte imbalance is a frequent
paraneoplastic syndrome
observed in patients with advanced esophageal carcinoma. With regard to the etiology, bone metastases were detected in 13 of 49 patients with
hypercalcemia
; the remaining 36 patients were assumed to be induced by the production of hypercalcemic substance(s) by tumor tissues. Parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) is a newly discovered factor which increases serum calcium in vivo. The detection of PTHrP mRNA in tumor tissues as well as the production of PTHrP-like immunoreactivity by tumor tissues were closely associated with the development of
hypercalcemia
, suggesting that PTHrP is the major cause of
hypercalcemia
in patients with esophageal carcinoma.
...
PMID:Hypercalcemia in patients with esophageal carcinoma. The pathophysiologic role of parathyroid hormone-related protein. 193 13
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