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

One hundred and twenty-five cases of biopsy proven sarcoidosis have been found during a prospective study since 1972 in Calcutta, Eastern India. The presentation, clinical course and radiological features are considerably different from those seen in the West. Elderly males over 40 years are more prone. Low grade fever, cough, dyspnoea, arthralgia are common symptoms while hepatosplenomegaly, hypercalcaemia, hypercalciuria and hyperglobulinaemia are frequent signs. Nearly 60% are MT negative (up to 100 TU). Serum angiotensin converting enzyme and high lymphocyte count in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid are usual findings in active disease. Chest X-ray usually shows mottled opacities or fibrosis in 60% cases. Clinico-radiological dissociation (i.e. remarkable dissociation between the alarming-looking chest X-ray and scanty physical signs and symptoms in chest) was a very remarkable feature in this series. Treatment with oral steroid or steroid aerosol with oxyphenbutazone and chloroquine give equally good results initially. However, most cases tend to relapse inspite of adequate initial treatment. The pattern of the disease is similar almost all over India with minor regional differences like more erythema nodosum and eye involvement in Chandigarh in the extreme north (which could also have been due to case selection). The pattern from Northern India (Delhi) and Western India is nearly similar to our figures.
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PMID:Sarcoidosis in India: a review of 125 biopsy-proven cases from eastern India. 234 18

Eight patients with sarcoidosis seen at the Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, during the past 10 years were reviewed. Five of the eight patients came from non-metropolitan areas. The major presenting symptoms were cough, fatigue and weight loss; peripheral lymphadenopathy and hepatomegaly were common. None of the patients had eye or central nervous system involvement. Seven patients had bilateral hilar adenopathy on chest radiograph and six had parenchymal lung changes. Angiotensin converting enzyme was measured in six patients and was elevated in all, while hypercalcaemia was present in three patients. Five patients had a tissue biopsy showing the characteristic non-caseating granulomas. Corticosteroid therapy was used for four patients and was given for hypercalcaemia in three patients and for severe restrictive lung disease in one patient.
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PMID:Sarcoidosis in children. 356 75

An 8-year-old rabbit was referred to an ophthalmologist because of intermittent bilateral exophthalmos and prolapse of the nictitating membranes. Both eyes could be retropulsed normally, and the exophthalmos was induced with ventroflexion. The rabbit had moderate hypercalcemia and a large mediastinal mass that could be seen on thoracic radiographs. The rabbit's condition was unchanged for 5 months. It was reexamined because of weight loss and paroxysmal coughing and, at that time, was thin and tachypneic, and had reduced thoracic compliance. Thoracotomy was performed, and a 5-cm-diameter encapsulated mass, subsequently determined histologically to be thymoma, was removed. The rabbit was euthanatized after surgery because of complications. The periodic exophthalmos and hypercalcemia in this rabbit were believed to be paraneoplastic syndromes.
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PMID:Thymoma in a geriatric rabbit with hypercalcemia and periodic exophthalmos. 778 33

We report the results of a retrospective analysis of 120 patients with sarcoidosis admitted for the first time to the Clinical Hospital for Pulmonary Diseases "Jordanovac" from 1982 to 1983. Eighty-two women and 38 men (2,2:1) participated in the study. The most common symptoms at the time of hospitalization were cough (35%), erythema nodosum (32.5%), fever (28.3%) and dyspnea (20.9%). The peripheral lymph nodes were enlarged in 10% of the cases, liver in 10.8%, and spleen in 1.7%. Elevated sedimentation rate was found in 40.8% of the patients, hypercalcemia in 3.6%, and hypercalciuria in 23.4%. Peripheral lymphogenia was present in 59.2% of the patients, and hypergammaglobulinemia in 65.5%. Other biochemical parameters were followed, as well. According to the radiological classification, 65 (54.2%) were classified as belonging to Stage I, 51 (42.5%) as belonging to Stage II, and one as belonging to Stage III at the time of diagnosis. 50.8% of the patients presented with an acute onset of the disease, 37.2% had chronic disease, while 12 (10%) patients were detected accidentally. The diagnosis was based on typical clinical and radiologic features along with histological and/or cytological evidence of granuloma usually provided from the tissue biopsy specimens obtained during bronchoscopy (93.3%). Extrathoracic sarcoidosis most usually involved the liver, skin, joints and peripheral lymph nodes. Fifty-eight of the 120 (48.3%) patients were yielded to spontaneous healing. Twenty-seven patients were followed up from 2 to 6 years, and two (7.4%) patients later showed a chronic form of the disease. Corticosteroid therapy was administered to 62 (51.7%) patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Characteristics and outcome of pulmonary sarcoidosis]. 817 Feb 75

Spontaneous hemorrhage of a parathyroid adenoma is a rare occurrence which may manifest with a variety of symptoms including cervical pain, hoarseness, respiratory distress, and dysphagia. We report a case of an elderly woman with a parathyroid adenoma diagnosed 10 years ago and for which she had refused surgery. Throughout this period her hypercalcemia was carefully monitored, and she experienced no symptoms or adverse sequelae from her disease. However, the patient subsequently presented with a 1 day history of a sore throat and a nonproductive cough followed by the acute onset of dysphagia. At this time she was found to have an anterior neck hematoma extending to the midthorax. Computerized tomography and direct laryngoscopy were suggestive of the diagnosis and neck exploration confirmed the presence of a large hematoma beginning at the site of the 3 x 4 cm parathyroid adenoma and extending into the left strap musculature. We report this case of spontaneous hemorrhage of a cervical parathyroid adenoma to bring to mind a rare etiology of acute pharyngoesophageal dysphagia.
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PMID:Acute pharyngoesophageal dysphagia secondary to spontaneous hemorrhage of a parathyroid adenoma. 843 23

Chronic beryllium disease is predominantly a pulmonary granulomatosis that was originally described in 1946. Symptoms usually include dyspnea and cough. Fever, anorexia, and weight loss are common. Skin lesions are the most common extrathoracic manifestation. Granulomatous hepatitis, hypercalcemia, and kidney stones can also occur. Radiographic and physiologic abnormalities are similar to those in sarcoidosis. While traditionally the pathologic changes included granulomas and cellular interstitial changes, the hallmark of the disease today is the well-formed granuloma. Immunologic studies have demonstrated a cell-mediated response to beryllium that is due to an accumulation of CD4+ T cells at the site of disease activity. Diagnosis depends on the demonstration of pathologic changes (i.e., granuloma) and evidence that the granuloma was caused by a hypersensitivity to beryllium (i.e., positive lung proliferative response to beryllium). Using these criteria, the diagnosis of chronic beryllium disease can now be made before the onset of clinical symptoms. Whether, with early diagnosis, the natural course of this condition will be the same as when it was traditionally diagnosed is not known. Currently, corticosteroids are used to treat patients with significant symptoms or evidence of progressive disease.
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PMID:Chronic beryllium disease: diagnosis and management. 893 39

Two adult dogs were evaluated for hypercalcemia. Diagnostic evaluation identified elevated parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) and presumptive humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy. At necropsy, schistosomiasis was diagnosed. North American schistosomiasis is caused by Heterobilharzia americana. Clinical findings may include dermatitis, coughing, diarrhea, and anorexia. Clinicopathological findings may include hypercalcemia, hyperglobulinemia, hypoalbuminemia, anemia, and eosinophilia. Diagnosis by fecal examination is difficult. Praziquantel or fenbendazole treatment may be curative or palliative. These are the first reported cases of hypercalcemia with elevated PTHrP in animals without diagnosed malignancy. Elevation of PTHrP has not been previously reported in hypercalcemic humans or in animals with granulomatous inflammation.
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PMID:Elevated parathyroid hormone-related protein and hypercalcemia in two dogs with schistosomiasis. 1145 Aug 35

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) causes many kinds of symptoms such as hypercalcemia, hypertension, polycythemia and fever. Here we describe a rare case of RCC presenting with a persistent cough. After radical nephrectomy, the obstinate cough disappeared. When the tumor recurred locally, the cough also recurred. Furthermore, the cough disappeared completely again after the removal of the recurrent tumor. Although all the clinical findings suggested that the RCC caused the cough, we could not identify a specific humoral substance responsible for the cough.
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PMID:Obstinate cough as a sole presenting symptom of non-metastatic renal cell carcinoma. 1776 Jul 55

Sarcoidosis is a multisystemic disorder of unknown cause characterized by the formation of immune granulomas in involved organs. It is an ubiquitous disease with incidence (varying according to age, sex, race and geographic origin) estimated at around 16.5/100,000 in men and 19/100,000 in women. The lung and the lymphatic system are predominantly affected but virtually every organ may be involved. Other severe manifestations result from cardiac, neurological, ocular, kidney or laryngeal localizations. In most cases, sarcoidosis is revealed by persistent dry cough, eye or skin manifestations, peripheral lymph nodes, fatigue, weight loss, fever or night sweats, and erythema nodosum. Abnormal metabolism of vitamin D3 within granulomatous lesions and hypercalcemia are possible. Chest radiography is abnormal in about 90% of cases and shows lymphadenopathy and/or pulmonary infiltrates (without or with fibrosis), defining sarcoidosis stages from I to IV. The etiology remains unknown but the prevailing hypothesis is that various unidentified, likely poorly degradable antigens of either infectious or environmental origin could trigger an exaggerated immune reaction in genetically susceptible hosts. Diagnosis relies on compatible clinical and radiographic manifestations, evidence of non-caseating granulomas obtained by biopsy through tracheobronchial endoscopy or at other sites, and exclusion of all other granulomatous diseases. The evolution and severity of sarcoidosis are highly variable. Mortality is estimated at between 0.5-5%. In most benign cases (spontaneous resolution within 24-36 months), no treatment is required but a regular follow-up until recovery is necessary. In more serious cases, a medical treatment has to be prescribed either initially or at some point during follow-up according to clinical manifestations and their evolution. Systemic corticosteroids are the mainstay of treatment of sarcoidosis. The minimal duration of treatment is 12 months. Some patients experience repeated relapses and may require long-term low-dose corticosteroid therapy during years. Other treatments (immunosuppressive drugs and aminoquinolins) may be useful in case of unsatisfactory response to corticosteroids, poor tolerance and as sparing agents when high doses of corticosteroids are needed for a long time. In some strictly selected cases refractory to standard therapy, specific antiTNF-alpha agents may offer precious improvement. Some patients benefit from topical corticosteroids.
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PMID:Sarcoidosis. 1802 32

55-year male of Asian descent presented with weight loss, lethargy, drowsiness and low grade fever without cough. Examination revealed crackles in the chest but no focal neurological deficit. Chest X ray revealed an infiltrate consistent with tuberculosis. Biopsy of infiltrate was negative for malignancy. Corrected calcium level revealed parathyroid independent hypercalcemia. Further diagnostic work up for drowsiness and hypercalcemia was normal. Despite receiving hydration and pharmacotherapy for his hypercalcemia, his condition failed to improve. When steroids were started, the patient's calcium levels and symptomatology resolved. Tuberculosis causing hypercalcemia is uncommon. Steroids are useful agents, particularly in refractory cases.
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PMID:Middle aged male with pulmonary tuberculosis and refractory hypercalcemia at a tertiary care centre in South East Asia: a case report. 1982 85


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