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

In the literature there is a paucity of references on urolithiasis in children with spinal cord injury. In this paper 28 cases of urolithiasis in 97 children with spinal cord injury are analysed. An attempt is made to evaluate the role of hypercalcemia, hypercalciuria and urinary tract infection in the genesis of these calculi.
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PMID:Urolithiasis in children with spinal cord injury. 43 66

Primary hyperparathyroidism is a major cause of calcium urolithiasis and is easily recognised when it is classically manifested. However, subtle presentations of primary hyperparathyroidism may cause confusion with other causes of calcium stone disease or cause diagnostic difficulty. Several pitfalls of parathyroid evaluation and treatment are illustrated by four cases of calcium urolithiasis. Cases 1 and 2 represent ineffective or useless parathyroid surgery rendered for renal hypercalciuria and absorptive hypercalciuria, respectively. Cases 3 and 4 had mild or intermittent hypercalcaemia. The correct diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism was made in Case 3 by parathyroid venous sampling and bone densitometry. In Case 4, the thiazide provocative test was used to establish the diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism.
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PMID:Pitfalls in parathyroid evaluation in patients with calcium urolithiasis. 50 80

A sixty nine-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital because of further examination of hypercalcemia. On July 1990, she complained of general fatigue and loss of appetite. She was pointed out to have hypercalcemia (15.1mg/dl), urolithiasis, and renal insufficiency. CT films of the chest showed swelling of the mediastinal lymphnodes and CT of the abdomen nephrocalcinosis. Ga-scintigraphy demonstrated an abnormal accumulation of gallium in the mediastinum. Levels of the parathyroid hormone was normal. Levels of the serum calcium (13.7mg/dl), angiotensin converting enzyme (30.4IU/L) and 1.25 (OH)2D (87PG/ml) were elevated. Giant cells were found in the biopsy specimen of the lung. A significant relationship between the serum calcium and creatinine were observed (r = 0.76, p < 0.02). Proximal fractional reabsorption of sodium showed to be suppressed (47.7%), and distal fractional reabsorption of sodium showed to be normal (88.4%). From these findings hypercalcemia and urolithiasis was suggested to result from sarcoidosis. The hypercalcemia and renal insufficiency improved with corticosteroid therapy.
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PMID:[A case of sarcoidosis with hypercalcemia, urolithiasis, nephrocalcinosis and renal insufficiency]. 148 16

About 7% of patients with calcium urolithiasis suffer from primary hyperparathyroidism. A systematic search for this diagnosis is therefore mandatory in such patients. Because hypercalcemia is often discrete or intermittent, determinations of calcium levels should be repeated at least thrice. Measurement of ionized calcium levels improves the detection of hypercalcemia. The biological diagnosis is based on the presence of hypercalcemia together with an increased plasma level of 1-84 intact parathormone (PTH). A PTH value still in the normal range but inappropriately elevated in the context of hypercalcemia could be sufficient for the diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism.
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PMID:[Should the parathyroid function be evaluated in a patient with calcium kidney stones? If so, when and why?]. 194 59

Immobilization-related hypercalcaemia is an uncommon but important condition being associated not infrequently with both urolithiasis and osteoporosis. In this study 5 patients who had been immobilized for a mean of 3 months and had a mean adjusted serum calcium of 3.15 mmol/l were treated with doses of intravenous pamidronate ranging between 10 mg and 45 mg. All patients became normocalcaemic by day 3. Patients 1-3 mobilized shortly after treatment and remained normocalcaemic. In those patients who continued to be immobile hypercalcaemia recurred after an interval of several weeks. Retreatment with pamidronate again resulted in normocalcaemia. No side effects were noted with treatment. All of the patients studied had increased rates of bone resorption as shown by elevated urinary hydroxyproline/creatinine ratios (median:range) of 0.101:0.045-0.180 (normal less than 0.033) and elevated calcium/creatinine ratios of 2.50:0.69-3.63 (normal less than 0.50). None of the patients in this study had any of the usual risk factors for developing immobilization-related hypercalcaemia though all 5 patients had problems with significant sepsis which we postulate may have lead to cytokine release which in turn contributed to the development of hypercalcaemia. We conclude that pamidronate (at doses as low as 10 mg) is safe and effective in immobilization-related hypercalcaemia and suggest that sepsis should be added to the list of risk factors for development of this syndrome.
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PMID:Immobilization-related hypercalcaemia--a possible novel mechanism and response to pamidronate. 226 2

Parathyroid hormone (PTH) is strongly concerned with the pathogenesis of urinary stones. PTH is mainly regulated by the serum calcium concentration and not by other hormones, as is usually the case. We studied whether PTH is also regulated by adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) or not. ACTH (0.25 mg) was injected intravenously to 17 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism PHP, 7 patients with urolithiasis, 7 patients with malignant hypercalcemia, and 6 control subjects. Serum calcium was significantly increased in only PHP. The serum calcium increase rate showed a significant positive correlation with serum alkaline phosphatase, and a negative correlation with the preinjected serum calcium. PTH was slightly increased in all four groups. Serum cortisol and ACTH concentrations were not significantly different among the groups. PTH concentration in a culture medium of parathyroid tissues increased after ACTH addition. Serum calcium was significantly increased after ACTH injection in an adrenalectomized rat, and decreased in a parathyroidectomized rat. From our data and those of others, it appears that ACTH acts on the adrenal glands to decrease the serum calcium concentration, and might act directly on the parathyroid gland or bones to increase it.
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PMID:[Studies on the endocrinological metabolism of the parathyroid. II. Influence of ACTH on parathyroid function and calcium metabolism]. 300 38

Over a period of 42 years, 581 patients with presumed hyperparathyroidism underwent an initial cervical exploration. Abnormal parathyroid glands were removed from 495 patients (85.2%). There was a greater probability of operative success in women, patients over 50 years of age, and patients with hypercalcemia, hypertension, or nonspecific abdominal pain. There was no association of operative outcome with some of the "classic" manifestations of hyperparathyroidism--peptic ulcer disease, neuropsychiatric symptoms, pancreatitis, bone disease, or urolithiasis. The probability of surgical success improved with time, increasing from 56 per cent in the 1950s to 97 per cent in the present decade. This improvement appears to be related to greater operative experience, since all four parathyroid glands were more likely to be found with increased experience, and there was a strong correlation between finding four parathyroids and achieving persistent normocalcemia. The most common causes of operative failure were inaccurate calcium assays (the patient was not truly hypercalcemic), an inappropriate diagnosis ("normocalcemic hyperparathyroidism"), and surgical inexperience. These three factors accounted for at least three fourths of all negative explorations. More accurate diagnostic studies, and careful exploration by an experienced surgeon should maximize the probability of a successful operation for primary hyperparathyroidism.
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PMID:Causes of the failed cervical exploration for primary hyperparathyroidism. 341 98

Of 123 patients with sarcoidosis observed from 1971 to 1986, 4 had histologically proven renal involvement. Hypercalcemia was present in all of these 4 patients, hypercreatinemia in 3 and urolithiasis in one. Histologically renal interstitial nephritis or fibrosis was found in all 4 cases, and 3 cases showed sarcoid-like renale granulomas. In addition, nephrocalcinosis or mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis was present in one patient each. Corticosteroid therapy corrected hypercalcemia in 3 patients and improved renal function in the patient with glomerulonephritis and in the case with interstitial fibrosis. One patient died of granulomatous myocarditis, renal insufficiency having been unaffected by corticosteroids.
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PMID:[Sarcoidosis of the kidney]. 343 93

Primary hyperparathyroidism results from autonomous secretion of parathyroid hormone by a single or multiple parathyroid glands. Clinical signs result from various combinations of hypercalcemia, hypercalcemic nephropathy, urolithiasis, or mobilization of calcium and phosphorus from bone. Following parathyroidectomy, the prognosis for dogs with primary hyperparathyroidism is good if the disorder is diagnosed before renal disease is advanced.
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PMID:Canine primary hyperparathyroidism and its association with urolithiasis. 351 5

Primary hyperparathyroidism resulted in calcium urolith formation and calcium nephropathy in 2 dogs. Uroliths composed of calcium phosphate were surgically removed from the bladder of one dog 3 months after surgical removal of a parathyroid adenoma. Five years later, hypercalcemia and urolithiasis had not recurred. In a second dog, calcium oxalate renal and bladder uroliths remained unchanged in size at 11 months after removal of a parathyroid adenoma. The possibility of primary hyperparathyroidism should be considered in any dog with calcium urolithiasis.
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PMID:Calcium urolithiasis in two dogs with parathyroid adenomas. 369 84


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