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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (
hypercalcemia
)
10,293
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient with known transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder and
hypercalcemia
was evaluated for urinary prostaglandin levels when no
bone metastases
or elevated parathormone levels could be demonstrated. Urinary levels of prostaglandin E metabolite were assessed in relation to serum and urinary calcium levels during treatment. The serum calcium levels decreased from the 13.0 mg. per cent range whenever the rpimary tumor was manipulated (transurethral resection) or when other treatments directed at the tumor were used (radiation therapy and chemotherapy). Serum and urinary calcium levels, and urinary prostaglandin E metabolite decreased when 3 gm. aspirin were given daily. These data suggest that the somewhat unusual
hypercalcemia
in our patient was caused by a prostaglandin-secreting transitional cell carcinoma. Prostaglandin-secreting tumors are reviewed herein.
...
PMID:Prostaglandin-mediated hypercalcemia in transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder. 66 Jul 46
The detection of specific hormone receptors in normal and tumor tissue has brought new insight into the mechanisms of action of hormones and anti-hormones. The Swiss Cooperative Cancer Study Group (SAKK) has evaluated the antitumor effect of the new antiestrogenic substance tamoxifen in metastatic breast cancer. 158 postmenopausal patients treated with 20 mg/d tamoxifen by mouth are evaluable at present time. Complete and good partial remissions were achieved in 39 patients (25%) largely with soft tissue but also lung and
bone metastases
. Tamoxifen was well tolerated and caused few serious complications such as thrombosis/pulmonary embolism and
hypercalcemia
. These results confirm already published experience with tamoxifen, which may replace the estrogens as the primary endocrine treatment in postmenopausal mammary carcinoma metastasizing to soft tissues, lung and bone.
...
PMID:[Antiestrogens: a new endocrine treatment possibility in metastasizing breast neoplasms. Experiences of the Swiss Cooperative Cancer Study Group with tamoxifen]. 69 81
Hypercalcemia
was found in 19 (28%) of 67 patients with cancer of the esophagus. There was no evidence of
bone metastases
in 14 (20%) of the patients with
hypercalcemia
. The location of the lesion (upper, middle or lower esophagus) appears to have no bearing on the clinical features in this condition and the association of
hypercalcemia
with esophageal malignancy, even in the absence of
bone metastases
, should be recognized.
...
PMID:Carcinoma of the esophagus and hypercalcemia. 86 Jul
Nonparathyroid humoral
hypercalcemia
is becoming an increasingly more common problem associated with carcinoma. Carcinomas of the head and neck may elaborate parathormone or parathormone-like humors that in the absence of
bone metastases
, renal disease, parathytoid tumors, or secondary hyperparathyroidism may produce
hypercalcemia
, which if unrecognized, complicates and prevents the appropriate management of the patient. This report deals with the production of parathyroid hormone and the first reported case, to our knowledge, of carcinoma of the larynx associated with nonparathyroid
hypercalcemia
.
...
PMID:Production of parathyroid hormone by laryngeal cancer. Report of a case. 114 29
The effect of magnesium chloride or magnesium sulfate infusion on circulating levels of immunoreactive calcitonin (iCT) was evaluated on nine occasions in three patients with metastatic medullary carcinoma of the thyroid. One patient was normocalcemic and had normal circulating levels of immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH), one patient was hypocalcemic and had surgical hypoparathyroidism, and one patient had mild to moderate
hypercalcemia
associated with
bone metastases
. The basal serum iPTH levels were undetectable in the latter two patients. In every instance magnesium administration produced a rapid and striking fall in circulating iCT and usually a detectable fall in serum calcium. During the hypermagnesemic state, serum iPTH fell from normal to undetectable in the patient with normal parathyroid function, while serum iPTH levels remained undetectable in the hypoparathyroid patient and in the patient with
hypercalcemia
associated with
bone metastases
. The results of these studies indicate that: (a) contrary to what has been reported in normal experimental animals, magnesium administration lowers circulating iCT in human subjects with thyroid medullary carcinoma and (b) the calcium-lowering effect produced by magnesium in patients with medullary carcinoma may, in part at least, be due to a redistribution of body calcium that is not mediated by the actions of either parathyroid hormone or clacitonin.
...
PMID:Serum calcitonin-lowering effect of magnesium in patients with medullary carcinoma of the thyroid. 120 87
In a double blind randomised multicentre study the effect of intravenous clodronate plus hydration was compared with placebo plus hydration in the treatment of
hypercalcaemia
in breast cancer patients with
bone metastases
. The patients were treated either with hydration plus clodronate 300 mg/day or hydration plus placebo, up to 7 days or until serum ionised calcium was below 1.4 mmol/l. 25 patients received clodronate and 19 placebo. A significant difference in favour of clodronate was observed in the time to reach normocalcaemia (P = 0.004) and in the number of patients achieving normocalcaemia (P = 0.0003). 17 patients of 21 evaluable patients on clodronate achieved normocalcaemia compared with 4 of 19 patients on placebo. The only adverse event clearly associated with clodronate was symptomatic hypocalcaemia in 1 patient. Thus, clodronate seems to be a safe and highly efficacious drug for the treatment of
hypercalcaemia
in breast cancer patients.
...
PMID:Intravenous clodronate for the treatment of hypercalcaemia in breast cancer patients with bone metastases--a prospective randomised placebo-controlled multicentre study. 138 38
The mechanisms by which tumor cells metastasize to bone are not well understood. We have investigated the role of the basement membrane glycoprotein, laminin, in bone metastasis, since antagonists to laminin have been shown to inhibit the formation of lung metastases. We studied the formation of osteolytic metastases caused by a human tumor which is known to cause osteolysis and
hypercalcemia
in nude mice. We found that tumor-bearing nude mice developed
hypercalcemia
, cachexia, and characteristic osteolytic lesions throughout the skeleton after injection of this human melanoma cell line (A375) into the left ventricle. When we gave injections to nude mice with A375 cells which had been exposed to C(YIGSR)3-NH2, a laminin-derived synthetic peptide containing three linear sequences of YIGSR with an amino-terminal cysteine which competes with laminin for its receptor, we found a decrease in the formation of detectable osteolytic
bone metastases
. The tumor cells were incubated with the antagonist and then inoculated into nude mice which were administered the antagonist i.p.
Hypercalcemia
and cachexia were also decreased in tumor-bearing mice treated with the laminin antagonist. In contrast, laminin itself increased the number of osteolytic
bone metastases
, as has been shown for other tumor cells. These data suggest that laminin plays a role in the formation of osteolytic
bone metastases
in this model and that laminin antagonists may be useful in the prevention of
bone metastases
in some human tumors.
...
PMID:A synthetic antagonist to laminin inhibits the formation of osteolytic metastases by human melanoma cells in nude mice. 139 44
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
Tumor-induced
hypercalcemia
and tumor-induced osteolysis are essentially due to a marked increase in osteoclast-mediated bone resorption, although the kidneys play an important contributory role in the genesis of tumor-induced
hypercalcemia
. Parathyroid hormone-like protein plays an essential role in tumor-induced
hypercalcemia
, and maybe in tumor-induced osteolysis, but other factors could also be responsible for the osteoclast activation secondary to the neoplastic infiltration of the skeleton. Treatment of tumor-induced
hypercalcemia
essentially consists of volume repletion and administration of potent anti-osteolytic drugs. The bisphosphonate pamidronate is particularly useful for that matter and a dose of 1.0 to 1.5 mg/kg can normalize serum calcium in about 90% of hypercalcemic cancer patients. The apparently low response rate of
bone metastases
to systemic antineoplastic therapy seems to essentially reflect the relative insensitivity of our current methods for assessing response in tumor-induced osteolysis. Newly developed biochemical markers of bone turnover could be particularly useful for that matter. Bisphosphonates are the most potent of the available inhibitors of osteoclast activity. Prolonged administration of oral pamidronate could reduce by almost one half the complications of tumor-induced osteolysis, and repeated bisphosphonate infusions could induce a dramatic relief of bone pain in one third and a sclerosis of lytic lesions in one fourth of the cases. These data must, however, be confirmed in randomized, blinded trials and many questions remain unanswered concerning the optimal therapeutic schemes. Medical therapy of tumor-induced osteolysis by noncytotoxic means has nevertheless become a reality.
...
PMID:Bone metastases and tumor-induced hypercalcemia. 151 Oct 19
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