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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (
hypercalcemia
)
10,293
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
50% of hospitalized medical emergency cases are cardiological and respiratory emergencies. Myocardial infarction, cardiogenic shock, ventricular arrhythmias and left ventricular failure often cause sudden death occurring within 1 or 2 hours. Therefore immediate management is necessary already in the prehospital phase of cardiovascular events. This does also apply for acute respiratory failure due to obstructive ventilatory disorders. Acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease frequently are masked and may be misinterpreted as encephalopathy or alcohol withdrawal syndrome. Sedation may be dangerous. Also neuroglucopenic syndrome and hyperosmolar coma are occasionally interpreted wrongly. Thyrotoxic crisis, adrenal crisis and
hypercalcemia
are characterized by lethargy, mental disturbance and weakness, by dehydration, myopathy, nausea, constipation,
diarrhea
or tenesms or arrhythmias. In this situation of varied symptoms the most important action is to think of endocrine emergency, which may have multiple etiologies.
...
PMID:[Cardiovascular emergencies--endocrine and metabolic crises. Practical hints for the physician in emergency service]. 711 36
Despite the increasing awareness of gastrinoma and its lethal peptic ulcer sequelae, the diagnosis is often initially missed or made as a terminal event. The authors screened all patients with peptic ulcer symptoms serious enough to warrant hospital admission or those associated with
diarrhea
, nephrolithiasis,
hypercalcemia
, or pituitary abnormality. In a one-year period (1979-1980) nine (of 14 suspected) new gastrinoma patients were identified using a sensitive and specific gastrin radioimmunoassay in combination with provocative tests including IV secretin, calcium, and food. Conventional upper GI series, CAT scan, arteriography, and endoscopy provided no additional information other than to confirm the presence of ulcer disease. Basal plasma gastrin levels were more than 200 pmol L-1 in only three of the nine (normal fasting plasma gastrin levels are less than 25 pmol L-1). Three patients presented with acute ulcer perforation, and the diagnosis of gastrinoma was suspected because of multiple ulcers and pancreatic masses. In three other patients, previous duodenal ulcer surgery had failed. One patient with dyspepsia, high basal plasma gastrin, negative secretin and calcium infusion studies, and a positive meal test was diagnosed as having G-cell hyperplasia; this was confirmed by biopsy and antral gastrin extraction. Antrectomy alone resulted in cure. In all patients tested, a positive calcium infusion or secretin bolus (greater than 100% rise over basal) strongly suggested the diagnosis of gastrinoma, which was confirmed at surgery. In the acute perforations, initial management with omental patch and cimetidine therapy allowed survival of two patients, while emergency total gastrectomy in the third resulted in death due to esophagojejunal leak. Elective patients were treated with cimetidine initially for at least two weeks before total gastrectomy. In this group there were no operative mortalities, and postoperative morbidity was minimal. This series illustrates three important points: (1) careful screening of an ulcer population using gastrin radioimmunoassay and provocative tests has enabled a high yield of gastrinomas while conventional investigations are of minimal values; (2) a high index of suspicion in appropriate cases is necessary; and (3) total gastrectomy performed under elective circumstances is safe and allows the patients to resume a normal and healthy life without the sequelae of aggressive peptic ulceration or daily drug administration.
...
PMID:The early diagnosis of gastrinoma. 712 38
Two patients with the watery
diarrhea
, hypokalemia, achlorhydria syndrome are described. Both had
hypercalcemia
, hypophosphatemia and suppressed parathyroid hormone activity. On repeated occasions the
diarrhea
was controlled by oral or intravenous phosphate buffer. An exhaustive search by sophisticated non-invasive methods and by celiac arteriography failed to demonstrate a pancreatic tumor. Yet, in both cases fairly large pancreatic non-beta-cell adenomas were found at laparotomy. The removal of these tumors was followed by complete recovery.
...
PMID:The watery diarrhea syndrome with hypercalcemia--a symptomatic response to phosphate buffer. 721 40
Sodium sulfate can be used to enhance the conjugation of phenolic drugs with sulfate and to treat
hypercalcemia
. It is thought that sulfate in is absorbed slowly and incompletely from the digestive tract. The purposes of this investigation were to determine the absorption of large amount of sodium sulfate (18.1 g as the decahydrate, equivalent to 8.0 g of the anhydrous salt) and to compare the bioavailability when this amount is administered orally to normal subjects as a single dose and as four equally divided hourly doses. The 72-hr urinary recovery of free sulfate following single and divided doses was 53.4 +/- 15.8 and 61.8 +/- 7.8%, respectively (mean +/- SD, n=5, p greater than 0.2). The single dose produced severe
diarrhea
while the divided doses caused only mild or no
diarrhea
. Thus, a large amount of sodium sulfate, when administered orally in divided doses over 3 hr, is well tolerated and is absorbed to a significant extent. Orally administered sodium sulfate may be useful for the early treatment of acetaminophen overdose.
...
PMID:Absorption of orally administered sodium sulfate in humans. 726 5
Paraneoplastic manifestations are signs and symptoms observed in patients with cancer, distant from the tumour or its metastases and not caused by invasion, obstruction or bulk mass. In children with cancer, paraneoplastic manifestations are rare and distinct from those observed in adults. Knowledge about paraneoplastic manifestations can be of great clinical importance because they may be the presenting sign of a tumour or its recurrence and hence facilitate early diagnosis. In contrast, they sometimes mask the symptoms of a tumour and cause diagnostic delay. In this review, paraneoplastic manifestations in children are described, including
hypercalcaemia
, Cushing syndrome, precocious puberty, opsoclonus/myoclonus, acquired von Willebrand disease, watery
diarrhoea
syndrome, and hypertension. The mechanisms causing these manifestations are also discussed.
...
PMID:Paraneoplastic manifestations in children. 784 90
The Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG) studied the response rate and toxicity of merbarone (1,000 mg/m2 IV continuous infusion days 1-5, q 21 days) in patients with advanced metastatic renal cell carcinoma. Among 36 eligible patients, there was one partial response for a response rate of 3% (95% C.I. 0.1-15%). There were no mixed responses. There were no treatment related deaths or adverse drug reactions. Significant anemia,
diarrhea
, and
hypercalcemia
were observed. Mild to moderate degrees of malaise/fatigue/lethargy, dizziness/vertigo, hyperglycemia, creatinine increase, nausea, vomiting, weight loss, pedal edema, dyspnea, and granulocytopenia were noted. Merbarone does not have significant activity as a single agent in advanced renal cell carcinoma.
...
PMID:Phase II evaluation of merbarone in renal cell carcinoma. 786 Feb 33
Two cases of neuroendocrine tumor in the liver, positive for VIP, without evidence of a primary tumor outside the liver is presented. One patient had a VIPoma syndrome with
diarrhea
, hypokalemia, and
hypercalcemia
, all symptoms were reversible after treatment consisting of somatostatin analogue and arterial liver embolization followed by liver resection. The other patient showed no endocrine symptoms. To the best of our knowledge, VIPomas apparently primary in the liver have not been previously described.
...
PMID:Liver VIPoma: report of two cases and literature review. 795 Aug 21
Possible new indications for the use of octreotide are discussed. In October 1988, octreotide received FDA-approved labeling for use in the management of carcinoid syndrome and vipomas. Since that time, research results and clinical experience have accumulated that suggest a potentially much broader therapeutic role for octreotide. Reports continue to be published on the use of octreotide for treating pituitary tumors, gastroenteropancreatic tumors, diabetes mellitus, AIDS-associated
diarrhea
, autonomic neuropathy, pancreatitis, pancreatic pseudocysts and ascites, complications of pancreatic surgery and transplantation, ileostomy-associated
diarrhea
, enterocutaneous fistulas, pancreatic fistulas, dumping syndrome, short bowel syndrome, and gastrointestinal bleeding. Other emerging indications for the use of octreotide include psoriasis,
hypercalcemia
, cancer-related pain, polycystic ovary syndrome, and certain cancers. In children, octreotide has been studied for use in treating hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy. Along with the common adverse effects of octreotide, such as pain at the injection site and nausea, less frequent effects, such as cholelithiasis, gallbladder hypercontractility, and gastritis have now been described. Much of what has been learned is based on small uncontrolled studies and case reports, since the rarity of many of the conditions for which octreotide has shown promise has tended to preclude larger studies. As clinical experience with octreotide accumulates and better-designed trials are completed where possible, a broader therapeutic role for octreotide is likely to be recognized.
...
PMID:Emerging indications for octreotide therapy, Part 1. 804 37
After surgical resection for rectosigmoid carcinoma a 63-year-old man had secretory
diarrhea
causing severe metabolic acidosis, hypokalemia,
hypercalcemia
and dehydration. Subsequent investigations revealed a mass measuring 4 x 5 cm in the uncinate process of the pancreas and an elevated vasoactive intestinal polypeptide concentration. The
diarrhea
responded to treatment with the somatostatin analogue. Sandostatin, and remained under control during a prolonged preoperative period. The patient underwent a Whipple procedure with immediate lessening of his
diarrhea
. This report illustrates a classic case of vipoma and demonstrates the need to consider this condition in the differential diagnosis of secretory
diarrhea
, even in the presence of other gastrointestinal lesions. The effectiveness of somatostatin analogues in stabilizing the
diarrhea
preoperatively is also well illustrated.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of pancreatic cholera: a case report. 876 28
We report a 28 years old woman who consulted for
diarrhea
of two years and a thyroid nodule. A medullary thyroid carcinoma was diagnosed and a thyroidectomy performed. There was a local relapse two months later and distant metastases were found five months later. A MIBG-1131 scintigraphic image of the adrenals lead to the suspicion of a bilateral pheochromocytoma. The surgical resection of the adrenals confirmed the diagnosis. There was no response to chemotherapy and the patient continued with severe
hypercalcemia
, repeated infections, persistent
diarrhea
and cachexia, dying one year after the diagnosis. There was no family history of the disease. We conclude that this is a particularly aggressive presentation of a multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2A.
...
PMID:[Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2A. Report of a case with an unusually aggressive outcome]. 919 24
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