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 53-year-old woman with recurrent nephrolithiasis was found to have hypercalcaemia of 3.12 mmol/l and an intact parathormone level of 166 pg/ml, indicating primary hyperparathyroidism. Preoperative ultrasound examination to localize the parathyroid adenoma revealed a clear fluid-containing cyst in the right lobe of the thyroid. The aspirated fluid had an intact parathormone level of 306 pg/ml, twice that in serum. The cyst was removed surgically. 14 days postoperatively calcium and parathormone levels in serum had become normal without any calcium administration. Measuring the concentration of intact parathormone in the aspirated cyst fluid made possible not only the distinction from a thyroid cyst but also the precise preoperative localization of the parathyroid cyst.
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PMID:[Endocrinously active parathyroid cysts. Their diagnosis by the determination of intact parathormone in the cyst fluid]. 162 34

For assessing the risk of adverse complications of surgery the group of 130 patients with post-operational hypoparathyroidism was analysed. Surgical hypoparathyroidism has been diagnosed in 51% of operated on thyroid gland patients. Laryngeal nerves have been damaged in 46.6% of patients. The injury to laryngeal nerves has been irreversible in 2/3 of patients, and reversible in the remaining 1/3. Cataract, nephrolithiasis and vitamin D3 intoxication have been observed in some cases before surgery. Their incidence increased in severe surgical hypoparathyroidism. Osteoporosis of the spine has been diagnosed in 49% of patients including some with vertebral fractures. No correlation between the degree of spine osteoporosis and diagnosis before surgery, number of operations on thyroid gland, and type of therapy has been noted. The symptoms of hypercalcemia have been diagnosed in 5 patients out of which hypercalcemia has been transient in 2 patients, and lasted for 1-5 months in the remaining 3 patients. The results of 7,873 analyses of mineral metabolism have been assessed. Hypocalcemia has been found in 38.4%, hypercalcemia in 1.6%, hypomagnesemia in 25.7%, hyperphosphatemia in 41.5%, decreased alkaline phosphatase serum activity in 28.7%, and hypercalciuria in 22.4% of cases. Surgical hypoparathyroidism is frequently accompanied by surgical hypothyroidism and injury to the recurrent laryngeal nerves.
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PMID:[Postoperative hypoparathyroidism: risk of complications]. 166 68

A review of 106 patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) type 1 reported between 1966-1989 in Japan was conducted in order to clarify the natural history of this disease. Sporadic MEN 1 was found in 61 patients, and familial MEN 1 was found in 45 patients from 15 families. The mean ages at diagnosis of the two groups were 46.2 and 41.3 years, respectively, and the male to female ratio was 3:4. With regards to the involvement of the pituitary, parathyroid and endocrine pancreas, the combination of three endocrine glands was 31%, and that of two was 48%, in which the pituitary, parathyroid and endocrine pancreas had tumorous lesions in 60%, 88% and 63%, respectively. The first clinical manifestations of MEN 1 were the symptoms of hyperparathyroidism (32%), pituitary tumors (26%), peptic ulcer (28%) and hypoglycemia (13%). These symptoms appeared between 6 and 57 years of age (mean 34 years). The main clinical symptoms of the pituitary tumors were acromegaly and gigantism (37%), galactorrhea-amenorrhea syndrome (20%), Cushing's disease (10%) and visual disturbance due to compression of the tumor (20%). The clinical manifestations of hyperparathyroidism were mainly asymptomatic hypercalcemia (41%), nephrolithiasis (42%) and osteitis fibrosa (5%). In the patients with pancreatic tumor, Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (52%) and hypoglycemic symptoms (42%) were found. Tumors in the adrenal cortex, thyroid, carcinoid and lipoma were detected in association with MEN 1 in the frequencies of 28%, 21%, 9% and 5%, respectively. Death was reported in 37 patients between 9 and 86 years of age (mean 50.0 years). The cause of death was gastrointestinal bleeding and perforation (45%), surgery (24%) and disseminated carcinomatosis (18%). Recently, the gene predisposing to this syndrome has been assigned to chromosome 11 (11q13) in non-Japanese cases but not yet in Japanese MEN 1 patients.
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PMID:[Clinical characteristics in multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 in Japan: a review of 106 patients]. 167 21

Several recent articles question whether patients with asymptomatic hyperparathyroidism and minimal hypercalcemia should be treated by parathyroidectomy. We therefore reviewed our experience in 103 consecutive patients with primary hyperparathyroidism who were treated by parathyroidectomy to determine, first, how many of these patients had asymptomatic or symptomatic hyperparathyroidism, and second, did these patients benefit from parathyroidectomy? We also analyzed the safety of parathyroidectomy in 426 consecutive patients, including 79 who required reoperation for hyperparathyroidism, specifically looking for complications and the outcome of these procedures. Our study documents the following: (1) only 2 of 103 (2%) patients referred for parathyroidectomy had "true" asymptomatic hyperparathyroidism; (2) only symptoms of fatigue, bone pain, and weight loss correlated with the degree of hypercalcemia, whereas muscular weakness, psychiatric symptoms, nocturia, polyuria, recent memory loss, constipation, and nephrolithiasis did not; (3) only 1 of 15 patients who were referred as asymptomatic were truly asymptomatic after more thorough questioning, and all 14 improved following parathyroidectomy; (4) 81% of the patients who were referred with symptoms improved following parathyroidectomy; and (5) permanent complications occurred in only 4 patients. All but 1 had reoperations for persistent or recurrent hyperparathyroidism (3 vocal cord paralyses and 1 hypoparathyroidism requiring autotransplantation of cryopreserved parathyroid tissue). There was 1 death of an 84-year-old woman with hypercalcemic crisis. Thus, most patients with hyperparathyroidism are symptomatic and benefit symptomatically and metabolically from parathyroidectomy, which is a safe operation.
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PMID:Diagnosis and management of asymptomatic hyperparathyroidism: safety, efficacy, and deficiencies in our knowledge. 176 65

Primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) is characterized by hypersecretion of parathyroid hormone (PTH) leading to hypercalcemia and relative hypophosphatemia. PTH acts by binding to cell surface receptors coupled to G proteins. Cyclic AMP is the classic second messenger of PTH action, but substantial evidence indicates that PTH also acts to stimulate formation of the dual second messengers, inositol trisphosphate and diacylglycerol, thereby mobilizing intracellular calcium. The physiologic actions of PTH include (1) an increase in extracellular fluid ionized calcium through direct actions on kidney and bone, the classic target organs for PTH, and (2) a decrease in extracellular fluid phosphate primarily through renal action. The pathophysiologic effects of PTH arise from (1) direct actions of PTH on bone and kidney, and possibly on nonclassic target organs, and (2) indirect effects of altered mineral homeostasis. PTH hypersecretion in PHPT can lead to bony demineralization, nephrolithiasis, and hypercalcemic crisis. PHPT may also be associated with mental disturbances, neuromuscular disease, hypertension, and glucose intolerance.
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PMID:Pathophysiology of primary hyperparathyroidism. 176 67

Treatment with 1,25-(OH)2D3 (calcitriol) was compared with placebo in a double-blind, randomized, parallel clinical trial of 24 months' duration. Subjects were white women with postmenopausal osteoporosis. The study was completed by 15 patients who received placebo and 12 patients who received calcitriol. Positive slopes were observed in the active treatment group for total body calcium, bone mineral content of the radius, bone mineral density of the lumbar spine, and radiographic absorptiometry of the middle phalanges. In contrast, negative slopes were observed for the bone mineral measurements in the placebo group. Measurement of urinary hydroxyproline and of serum alkaline phosphatase and osteocalcin suggested that the mechanism of action of 1,25-(OH)2D3 involved reduction of bone resorption. Hypercalciuria occurred regularly and preceded hypercalcemia by about 2 weeks. A decline in creatinine clearance was observed in two patients, one of whom had nephrolithiasis on sonography. Calcitriol is effective in preventing bone loss, but must be used with caution.
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PMID:Role of calcitriol in the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis. 218 76

Serum-calcium levels were determined in 9666 hospital inpatients during one year. Hypercalcaemia was present in 101 patients (51 women, 50 men, mean age 57 years). In 46 patients, hypercalcaemia was caused by malignancy. The second commonest cause was primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) in 35 cases. In the other 20 patients, hypercalcaemia was related to thiazid medication (8 patients), elevated 25-hydroxy-vitamin-D3-levels (six patients) or immobilisation (two patients). In four patients, no cause was found. Intact parathyroid hormone levels reliably distinguished patients with pHPT (values greater than 60 ng/l) from patients with hypercalcaemia of other causes (values less than 40 ng/l). Other laboratory tests were less useful. Serum-calcium levels greater than 2.9 mmol/l were found only in pHPT and hypercalcaemia of malignancy. In pHPT, the medical history frequently revealed nephrolithiasis (12 patients) and gastrointestinal ulcers (8 patients), whereas weight loss was far more common in hypercalcaemia of malignancy (28 patients).
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PMID:[Epidemiology of hypercalcemia. Significance of the determination of intact parathyroid hormone for differential diagnosis]. 222 85

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.
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PMID:Lithiumogenic disorders of the thyroid and parathyroid glands as surgical disease. 224 24

Recent data have shown that administration of prostaglandin inhibitors to patients with hypercalciuric nephrolithiasis decreased urinary calcium excretion, implying a possible role for prostaglandins in calcium excretion. To explore this hypothesis, we investigated the effect of single dose or 7 days' administrations of aspirin (100 mg/kg orally) or indomethacin (20 mg/kg, orally) on the urinary and serum concentrations of calcium, magnesium and inorganic phosphate. Experiments were performed in normocalcaemic and hypercalcaemic rats. Hypercalcaemia and hypercalciuria were induced in male Wistar albino rats by administration of vitamin D3 (20,000 IU/daily) for 7 days. Aspirin and indomethacin both significantly lowered the urinary calcium excretion in normocalciuric and hypercalciuric rats. The acute administration of indomethacin caused greater reduction of calcium excretion than that produced by the acute administration of aspirin, whereas aspirin showed greater activity than indomethacin after the long-term use of each. Aspirin induced hypocalcaemia in normocalcaemic rats and abolished the hypercalcaemia in hypercalcaemic rats. On the contrary, indomethacin, a specific prostaglandin biosynthesis inhibitor, increased serum levels of calcium. Hypophosphataemia was observed only after the administration of a single dose of aspirin in normocalcaemic rats, while the reduction of urinary phosphate excretion was investigated in hypercalciuric rats after the acute and chronic administration of indomethacin. Serum levels of phosphate were not altered significantly by acute or chronic administration of indomethacin. A single dose of indomethacin significantly reduced urinary excretion of magnesium in both groups of rats. However, the acute and chronic administration of aspirin resulted in non-significant changes in serum and urinary concentrations of magnesium. These data suggest that aspirin has hypocalcaemic and hypocalciuric actions while indomethacin has only a hypocalciuric effect. Aspirin may produce these actions by two mechanisms, one of them like that of indomethacin which is dependent on the inhibition of biosynthesis of prostaglandins, and another possible mechanism that is not related to the inhibition of prostaglandin biosynthesis. This suggestion may be supported by the discrepancy between the effects of aspirin and indomethacin on the renal handling and serum concentrations of magnesium and inorganic phosphate.
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PMID:Effect of aspirin and indomethacin on the serum and urinary calcium, magnesium and phosphate. 233 Mar 39

Experience in the diagnosis and treatment of the renal form of primary hyperparathyroidism in 57 patients with bilateral nephrolithiasis was summed up. The main diagnostic criterion was the detection of biochemical changes in the blood and urine (hypercalcemia, hypophosphatemia, hypercalciuria) and the use of some tests (Howard's test and parathyroidin test). Parathyroidectomy was performed after establishing diagnosis. A new stage in therapy of such patients was a study of renal function and phosphocalcium metabolism after parathyroidectomy. The improvement of some indices (an increase in glomerular filtration, urea excretion with urine and relative urine density, and a decrease in hypercalciuria and hyperphosphaturia) indicated the effectiveness of surgical intervention for primary hyperparathyroidism in patients with bilateral nephrolithiasis. It was also confirmed by a decrease in lithogenic relapse after parathyroidectomy.
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PMID:[Primary hyperparathyroidism in patients with bilateral nephrolithiasis]. 258 27


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