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

Idiopathic hypercalciuria, defined as the urinary excretion of more than 300 mg. calcium per day in men or more than 250 mg. calcium per day in women, or more than 4 mg. calcium per kg. per day, is observed in about 50 per cent of the patients with calcium oxalate/apatite nephrolithiasis and is one of the risk factors for stone formation. These patients do not exhibit hypercalcemia, elevated serum parathyroid hormone concentrations or urinary cyclic adenosine monophosphate excretion nor clinical evidence of sarcoidosis, other granulomas or a malignancy. Hypophosphatemia may be present. Augmented rates of intestinal absorption of dietary calcium account for most of the increments in urinary calcium. Serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D concentrations are in the upper normal range or elevated among many patients and are normal but not suppressed in the others. Activation of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D formation may be secondary to hypophosphatemia or other, as yet undefined, factors. Since, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D apparently can up-regulate its own receptor, small increments in its synthesis and blood levels could amplify the effect of the hormone to stimulate intestinal calcium absorption. Calcium balances are slightly but significantly negative and urinary hydroxyproline excretion may be increased so that a generalized disorder of calcium homeostasis also involving bone may be present. Additional studies are required to determine the genetic basis for the occurrence of idiopathic hypercalciuria in families, the cause of greater expression of idiopathic hypercalciuria in men and whether environmental factors (high dietary sodium chloride, protein and purified carbohydrate intakes) contribute to the expression of idiopathic hypercalciuria. Although thiazide diuretics, inorganic phosphate, magnesium hydroxide and potassium citrate have provided effective therapy, prospective studies are needed to determine optimum therapy and the optimum duration of treatment.
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PMID:Idiopathic hypercalciuria. 264 29

Hypercalcaemia is a frequent situation in clinical practice. An earlier detection is facilitated by routine analysis of serum calcium. The clinical manifestations depend on severity and the rate of onset of hypercalcaemia. Paucisymptomatic and asymptomatic presentations are the most frequent. Causes of hypercalcaemia are numerous and the mechanisms are various. PTH and vit. D play a preponderant part. In first of all iatrogenic cause are eliminated (all vit D preparations, thiazide diuretics, milk-alkali syndrome). Among non neoplastic hypercalcaemia primary hyperparathyroidism is the first diagnosis. Nephrolithiasis and asymptomatic forms are the most frequent presentations actually. The biochemical profile is not always typical. Generally the association of echography and tomodensitometry lead to the topographic diagnosis. Parathyroid surgical exploration is often necessary in difficult cases. Secondary, the other rare causes of hypercalcaemia are studied: sarcoidosis and granulomatosis disease, thyrotoxicosis and dome endocrinopathies, immobilisation hypercalcaemia, familial hypocalciuric, hypercalcaemia. All of this causes of hypercalcaemia are potentially reversible.
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PMID:[Non-neoplastic hypercalcemia]. 271 64

A 14-year-old Turkish boy had severe rickets that had been clinically evident since he was 2 years of age. When he was 5 years of age, he had normal serum calcium and phosphorus levels and increased alkaline phosphatase activity. Treatment with modest dosages of vitamin D (5000 U/d for 3 weeks) resulted in hypercalcemia. At 10 years of age, high-dose vitamin D (40,000 U/d) plus phosphorus (1.1 g/d) therapy for 20 days resulted in symptomatic nephrolithiasis. When, 14 years of age, he had normocalcemia, hypophosphatemia, increased alkaline phosphatase activity, and normal circulating parathyroid hormone concentration. Levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D were normal but those of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D were markedly increased. Rickets and osteopenia were evident on radiographs, and osteomalacia was present on trabecular bone obtained at biopsy. Balance study results showed increased intestinal absorption of calcium and phosphorus, hypercalciuria, and increased urinary phosphorus excretion. This patient manifests an unusual form of hypophosphatemic rickets in which hypercalciuria is a cardinal feature. In contrast with most varieties of hypophosphatemia, this disorder is characterized by appropriately increased production of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D in response to hypophosphatemia. It is recommended that urinary calcium excretion be assessed in all patients with hypophosphatemic rickets so that appropriate therapy will be instituted.
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PMID:Hypercalciuric hypophosphatemic rickets, mineral balance, bone histomorphometry, and therapeutic implications of hypercalciuria. 278 97

To evaluate the cause of hypercalciuria, we carried out the oral calcium tolerance test before and after parathyroidectomy in a patient with primary hyperparathyroidism who had recurrent and multiple nephrolithiasis. Preoperative laboratory examination showed hypercalcemia, hypophosphetamia, hypercalciuria, decrease in % tubular reabsorption of phosphorus and strikingly elevated urinary cyclic AMP excretion. The oral calcium tolerance test indicated a significantly greater increase in serum calcium (delta serum calcium: 1.4 mg/dl vs 0.8 mg/dl) and a significantly greater suppression of urinary cyclic AMP excretion (delta U-cyclic AMP:-3.56 moles/gCre vs-1.17 moles/gCre) before parathyroidectomy than after. These results showed that hypercalciuria in this case was induced not only by the significant increase in the filtrated load of calcium but by the reduction in the resorption of calcium in the distal tubule caused by the significantly suppressed parathyroid hormone effect.
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PMID:[A case report: primary hyperparathyroidism--comparison before and after parathyroidectomy by oral calcium tolerance test]. 283 26

A patient with sarcoidosis with elevated 1,25-dihydroxy vitamin D levels, hypercalcemia, nephrolithiasis, and moderate azotemia is presented because of development of metastatic pulmonary calcification which was diagnosed by radioisotope scanning and tissue biopsy.
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PMID:Metastatic pulmonary calcification in sarcoidosis. 324 21

Calcitriol was compared with placebo in the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis in a double-blind, randomized, parallel clinical trial of 24 months' duration. Adjustment was made in dietary calcium to maximize the dose of calcitriol. The study was completed by 15 patients who received placebo and 12 patients who received calcitriol. The calcitriol group had positive slopes (compared with negative slopes for the placebo 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. The difference between the two groups was statistically significant for each of these measurements. The fracture rate in the treatment group was 250 per 1,000 patient-years as compared with 333 for the placebo group. The mean dose of calcitriol was 0.8 micrograms per day. Hypercalcemia, hypercalciuria, and perhaps nephrolithiasis were observed as complications of treatment. Calcitriol increased bone mineral density by decreasing bone resorption, but not by increasing bone formation. Future studies should concentrate on treatment with oral calcitriol in lower doses. It would also be of interest to examine parenteral administration of calcitriol. It is possible that bone formation can be increased by achieving higher serum levels of the drug, whereas complications may be avoided by using a non-oral route of administration.
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PMID:Calcitriol in the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis. 327 69

A 35-year-old white male with rheumatoid arthritis who had developed hypercalcemia, hypercalciuria, and nephrolithiasis was found to be abnormally sensitive to vitamin D as a result of lack of regulation of circulating 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25-(OH)2D). An increase in daily intake of vitamin D from 10 micrograms (400 units) per day to 50 micrograms (2000 units) per day produced an abnormal elevation in serum 1,25-(OH)2D, hypercalcemia, and hypercalciuria which were corrected by prednisone. Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D initially was abnormally low, and increased with vitamin D to values which were in the low normal range. There were significant positive correlations between serum 1,25-(OH)2D (p less than .05) and serum calcium and between serum 1,25-(OH)2D and urinary calcium (p less than .05). Serum immunoreactive parathyroid hormone, initially in the lower range of normal, decreased further during hypercalcemia. A radiograph of the chest, gallium scan, and serum angiotensin-converting enzyme activity were normal. No granulomas or evidence of lymphoma were found in biopsies of the liver and of several lymph nodes. It is concluded that the abnormal calcium metabolism in this patient resulted from increased circulating 1,25-(OH)2D and that the defect in vitamin D metabolism was not related to sarcoidosis, other granulomatous disease, Hodgkin's disease, or lymphoma. The relationship, if any, of the abnormal metabolism of vitamin D and calcium to rheumatoid arthritis remains to be established.
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PMID:Abnormal calcium metabolism caused by increased circulating 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D in a patient with rheumatoid arthritis. 350 40

The metabolic manifestations and operative findings in 10 patients with a diagnosis of parathyroid carcinoma were analyzed to determine whether they differ from those in patients with parathyroid adenomas and similar degrees of hypercalcemia. Two groups of patients with parathyroid adenomas were used for comparison. Group A consisted of eight patients with "atypical" benign adenomas (mean preoperative level of serum calcium: 13.4 mg/dl); group B consisted of 13 patients with benign typical adenomas--all with preoperative serum calcium levels greater than or equal to 13.0 mg/dl (mean: 14.2 mg/dl). The patients with carcinoma (mean preoperative level of serum calcium: 15.3 mg/dl) had a frequency of osteoporosis and osteitis fibrosa cystica (50%) comparable with that of group A (33%) and group B (62%). Seventy percent of the patients with carcinoma had renal disease (nephrolithiasis, nephrocalcinosis, or impaired renal function), whereas only 38% of group A and 15% of group B had similar disorders. The patients with carcinomas had the highest frequency of combined bone and renal disease (50% versus 14% in group A and 15% in group B). Anemia, peptic ulcer disease, and hypertension occurred with similar frequencies in the three groups. Three patients with recurrent parathyroid carcinoma died of profound hypercalcemia, renal failure, or cardiac arrhythmia. In general, although patients with parathyroid carcinomas have more profound metabolic abnormalities than do patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, the metabolic manifestations in patients with parathyroid carcinoma are comparable with those in patients with parathyroid adenomas and profound hypercalcemia. Furthermore atypical adenomas share many anatomic and histopathologic features with parathyroid carcinomas, and distinguishing between the two is sometimes possible only in cases of tumor recurrence.
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PMID:Parathyroid carcinoma versus parathyroid adenoma in patients with profound hypercalcemia. 358 61

Of the 90 cases of primary hyperparathyroidism surgically treated in our department over the last decade (1975-1985), ten cases had a mediastinal parathyroidal adenoma. In only two of these patients was a median sternotomy required for excision of the mediastinal adenoma. Three of the ten patients underwent the initial operation in other institutions, having undergone a previous neck exploration. There were seven males and three females, ages ranging from 41-68 years. Six patients had nephrolithiasis, four had both renal stones and bone disease and two had peptic ulcer disease. One of them was operated on as an emergency because of hyperparathyroidism crisis with calcium levels of 15/16 mg%. Four patients were asymptomatic and had hypercalcemia detected by SMA screening. The calcium level ranged from 11.5-16.2 mg%. The phosphorus ranged from 1.6-2.8 mg% with a mean of 2.0 mg%. All ten patients had plasma PTH determination by radioimmunoassay, the values ranged from 1.5-3 times normal. In seven of the ten cases, the mediastinal parathyroid adenoma was localized within the thymus, the other three were adjacent to the great vessels, two to the aortic arch and one to the pulmonary artery-size ranging from 1.2-5.4 cm. Preoperative localization techniques: venous sampling in four cases; technetium scanning in three cases. No preoperative localization techniques were used in the other three cases. There was no mortality nor other significant postoperative complications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism due to mediastinal parathyroid adenoma. 361 May 35

Little information is available on the long-term influence of parathyroidectomy on the rate of renal stone formation in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) and nephrolithiasis. The reported occurrence of renal stone disease in untreated patients with pHPT is 15% to 30%. A registry of 258 pHPT patients who underwent parathyroidectomies at the Milwaukee Regional Medical Center has allowed continued follow-up of the 71 (28%) pHPT patients with associated renal stone disease. Patients have been followed up for an average of 5 years (range, 1 to 15 years) since surgery. The rate of renal stone formation before and after parathyroidectomy was compared. Identification of a "new" renal stone was defined as passage and collection, extraction, or radiographic visualization of stones. All 71 pHPT patients with stone disease had hypercalcemia and inappropriately elevated parathyroid hormone concentrations, and after parathyroidectomy these values returned to normal in 69 of 71 patients. Since undergoing parathyroidectomy, only 4 patients have passed renal stones. The rate of stone formation per patient per year was 0.36 before and 0.02 after surgery (p less than 0.001). Surgical correction of pHPT significantly reduced the rate of stone formation.
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PMID:The effect of parathyroidectomy on the recurrence of nephrolithiasis. 368 54


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