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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (
hypercalcemia
)
10,293
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Severe
hypercalcemia
is a medical emergency requiring urgent treatment. It most commonly is caused by malignant tumors, as in the case study, but can also be caused by advanced hyperparathyroidism or high serum levels of vitamin D. The patient described in the case study shows clinical evidence of volume contraction due to
hypercalcemia
-related
anorexia
and vomiting. His elevated serum concentrations of urea nitrogen and creatinine reflect intravascular volume depletion and
hypercalcemia
-induced reduction of renal perfusion. He is also likely to have irreversible renal damage as a result of nephrocalcinosis. His central nervous system depression is most likely a result of
hypercalcemia
, but other central nervous system disorders such as cerebral metastases should be considered. Appropriate treatment would include intravenous fluids to correct volume depletion, dilute extracellular fluid calcium, and promote renal calcium excretion. Before waiting for the effects of volume expansion, the first dose of an inhibitor of bone resorption should be given. The agent of choice now (this may change when second-generation bisphosphonates become available) is plicamycin. Etidronate is a reasonable second choice. Because both drugs require at least 48 hours before their hypocalcemic action is manifest, calcitonin could be used to accelerate the rate of decline of the serum calcium. As the patient becomes more alert, weight-bearing and ambulation should be encouraged. With this combination of therapeutic modalities, this patient's serum calcium level should be corrected within 3 to 5 days. Intermittent injections of mithramycin or etidronate could be given on an outpatient basis approximately once a week in order to maintain the serum calcium within the normal range. One of the most important aspects of treatment in hypercalcemic patients is eradication of the underlying disease, which usually calls for specific antitumor therapy, including chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or surgery. Most of the agents currently available for the correction of
hypercalcemia
have cumulative toxicities or are only transiently effective and, therefore, their use should be considered a temporizing measure until specific treatment directed at the primary disease takes effect.
...
PMID:Management of severe hypercalcemia. 200 13
A variety of side effects have been reported with the use of interleukin-2 alone or in combination with lymphokine-activated killer cells in patients with disseminated neoplasms. The present study was undertaken to determine the effects of high-dose interleukin-2 administration in normal rats. Sprague-Dawley rats were treated with intravenous recombinant interleukin-2 (900,000 IU/kg/day) for 9 consecutive days. Animals were placed in individual metabolic cages, and arterial blood pressure, food intake, body weight, and urine output were monitored. On day 10, animals were killed by exsanguination, various tissues were harvested, and a variety of hematologic and chemical assays were performed. The results were compared with those of placebo-injected normal control and pair-fed groups. The interleukin-2-treated group exhibited
anorexia
, weight loss, hypotension, anemia, leukocytosis, lymphocytosis, eosinophilia,
hypercalcemia
, azotemia, and a marked urinary concentration defect. Histologic examination of various tissues revealed widespread infiltration with mono-nuclear cells and eosinophils in most organs, especially in the lungs and liver of interleukin-2-treated animals. Other abnormalities included severe panlobular hepatitis, hepatocellular necrosis, and thymic involution. Renal involvement was mild and consisted of focal interstitial infiltration by mononuclear cells. According to these observations, administration of high-dose interleukin-2 in normal rats results in a score of significant functional, biochemical, and histologic abnormalities.
...
PMID:Functional, biochemical, and histopathologic consequences of high-dose interleukin-2 administration in rats. 206 48
Hypercalcemia
secondary to cholecalciferol rodenticide toxicosis was identified in two dogs. The first dog died shortly after admission. The second dog responded to treatment with sodium chloride solution, prednisolone, furosemide, and calcitonin. Treatment was needed for a longer period than anticipated and the serum calcium concentration did not stabilize for approximately one month. Although not conclusively demonstrated, calcitonin was considered the cause of severe
anorexia
. This new class of rodenticides has great toxic potential for dogs, and it is recommended that serum calcium concentration be carefully monitored as treatment for
hypercalcemia
is gradually withdrawn.
...
PMID:Hypercalcemia secondary to cholecalciferol rodenticide toxicosis in two dogs. 215 59
Hypercalcemia
is a potentially lethal endocrine disorder occurring in 10% to 20% of cancer patients at some time during the course of their disease. Clinical manifestations vary in severity, depending on the degree and duration of
hypercalcemia
, rapidity of onset, patient's age, performance status, sites of metastases, previous antineoplastic therapy, and the presence of hepatic or renal dysfunction. The clinical features of
hypercalcemia
are protean and affect multiple organ systems, resulting most prominently in neurologic, gastrointestinal, renal, cardiovascular, and musculoskeletal morbidity. Recognition of the disorder requires a high index of suspicion because many of its symptoms, such as nausea,
anorexia
, weakness, fatigue, lethargy, and confusion, are non-specific and, in the patient with a malignancy, can result from other complications of the primary disorder. If identified appropriately as being related to
hypercalcemia
, such symptomatology is potentially reversible with treatment. Whereas in the ambulatory general medical population the most common cause of
hypercalcemia
is primary hyperparathyroidism, in cancer patients and hospitalized patients in general, the most common cause is malignancy.
Hypercalcemia
in cancer patients is, in most cases, due to advanced metastasized disease. Diagnostic tests are useful in the differential diagnosis of
hypercalcemia
, and such tests, together with an accurate history and careful clinical observation, permit the best therapeutic approach to an individual patient.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations of cancer-related hypercalcemia. 218 49
Idiopathic infantile
hypercalcaemia
is a rare state characterized by failure to thrive,
anorexia
, vomiting, constipation and psychomotor retardation. We report a case of an infant with this syndrome.
...
PMID:[Idiopathic infantile hypercalcemia]. 225 89
An 18-year-old Appaloosa mare was examined because of squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva,
anorexia
with pronounced weight loss, and
hypercalcemia
. The tumor had developed rapidly over a period of 3 months and externally extended ventrally involving the perineum and the dorsal aspect of the udder. Necropsy examination demonstrated a large primary squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva, perineum, and mammary gland with metastases to the supramammary, sublumbar, deep inguinal, and mediastinal lymph nodes. No gross renal lesions were observed and, histologically, there was only mild vacuolation of renal tubular epithelium. Based on the normal concentration of serum parathyroid hormone, the absence of evidence of hypervitaminosis D, and normal renal function, a diagnosis was made of hypercalcemia of malignancy or pseudohyperparathyroidism. The mechanism responsible for
hypercalcemia
was not determined, but the histologic type of the neoplasm and the clinical course suggested possible production of a humoral hypercalcemic factor by the neoplasm, similar to that demonstrated in certain types of human squamous cell carcinoma.
...
PMID:Pseudohyperparathyroidism in a mare associated with squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva. 231 41
Primary hypoadrenocorticism was diagnosed in ten young to middle-aged cats of mixed breeding. Five of the cats were male, and five were female. Historic signs included lethargy (n = 10),
anorexia
(n = 10), weight loss (n = 9), vomiting (n = 4), and polyuria (n = 3). Dehydration (n = 9), hypothermia (n = 8), prolonged capillary refill time (n = 5), weak pulse (n = 5), collapse (n = 3), and sinus bradycardia (n = 2) were found on physical examination. Results of initial laboratory tests revealed anemia (n = 3), absolute lymphocytosis (n = 2), absolute eosinophilia (n = 1), and azotemia and hyperphosphatemia (n = 10). Serum electrolyte changes included hyponatremia (n = 10), hyperkalemia (n = 9), hypochloremia (n = 9), and
hypercalcemia
(n = 1). The diagnosis of primary adrenocortical insufficiency was established on the basis of results of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) stimulation tests (n = 10) and endogenous plasma ACTH determinations (n = 7). Initial therapy for hypoadrenocorticism included intravenous administration of 0.9% saline and dexamethasone and intramuscular administration of desoxycorticosterone acetate in oil. Three cats were euthanatized shortly after diagnosis because of poor clinical response. Results of necropsy examination were unremarkable except for complete destruction of both adrenal cortices. Seven cats were treated chronically with oral prednisone or intramuscular methylprednisolone acetate for glucocorticoid supplementation and with oral fludrocortisone acetate or intramuscular injections of repository desoxycorticosterone pivalate for mineralocorticoid replacement. One cat died after 47 days of therapy from unknown causes; the other six cats are still alive and well after 3 to 70 months of treatment.
...
PMID:Primary hypoadrenocorticism in ten cats. 246 93
A 57-year-old female was admitted to our hospital with general lassitude,
loss of appetite
, nausea, upper abdominal pain, thirst, polydipsia and polyuria. On admission, she had an asymmetrical pear-shaped tumor in the right supraclavicular region and severe
hypercalcemia
. Plasma C-PTH was elevated to 22.72ng/ml. Plasma calcitonin was also elevated to 336 pg/ml. She died of respiratory and cardiac failure of two weeks after admission without any positive response to the treatment, including hemodialysis. Pathohistologically, the tumor was a parathyroid adenoma. The concentrations of C-PTH, intact PTH and calcitonin in the tumor tissue were markedly high: 4.56 micrograms/g wet, 13.9 ng/g wet and 50.7 ng/g wet, respectively. Immunohistologically, the tumor cells and the fibrous stroma were stained strongly positive to rabbit anti-human calcitonin antibody and rabbit anti-human N-PTH antibody by indirect immunoperoxidase staining. Calcitonin-producing tumors, except for medullary thyroid carcinoma are rarely reported. To our knowledge, this is the first report of such a calcitonin-producing parathyroid adenoma associated with primary hyperparathyroidism.
...
PMID:A case of calcitonin-producing parathyroid adenoma with primary hyperparathyroidism. 258 94
A 49-year-old man with an 11 year history of NIDDM presented hypercalcemic and with acute on chronic renal failure. His only symptoms were mild
anorexia
and nausea. Four years previously he had been diagnosed as having lipoid pneumonia, with classical histological findings. On this admission, serum parathyroid hormone was suppressed and 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D levels elevated. The cause of his
hypercalcemia
presumably was ectopic 1 hydroxylation of 25 hydroxyvitamin D in the chronic granulomata in his lungs. It should be emphasised that any chronic granulomatous disease, and not just sarcoidosis, may be a cause of
hypercalcemia
.
...
PMID:Hypercalcemia and lipoid pneumonia. 263 65
Hypercalcemia
is a common life-threatening complication that often produces discomfort for the oncology patient. Prompt detection of this complication is imperative to prevent death and reverse uncomfortable symptoms. Laboratory analysis of a serum blood sample is presently the only means available to quantify
hypercalcemia
. A descriptive study was undertaken to determine what symptoms prompt oncology patients and their families to seek treatment of the
hypercalcemia
and to identify symptoms commonly associated with mild, moderate, and severe
hypercalcemia
. Seven hypercalcemic oncology patients were interviewed and observed on admission and during hospitalization for treatment of
hypercalcemia
. An identified significant other was also interviewed on admission and throughout the hospitalization to provide the researcher with information about subtle behavioral changes. A check-list of symptoms identified in the literature as being associated with
hypercalcemia
was completed. Symptoms that commonly led to admission included constipation, confusion, weakness, and
anorexia
. The most evident changes in a particular symptom within a given degree of
hypercalcemia
occurred in the mental status symptoms. The resulting data have implications for nurses in terms of patient assessment and of teaching patient and family about signs and symptoms of
hypercalcemia
that are observable at home.
...
PMID:Signs and symptoms associated with malignancy-induced hypercalcemia. 274 97
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