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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (
hypercalcemia
)
10,293
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The introduction of multiphasic screening and the development of sensitive parathormone assays have changed the demography and clinical symptomatology of patients presenting with primary hyperparathyroidism. This retrospective review includes 158 patients operated on for primary hyperparathyroidism at the Medical College of Georgia from 1973-1987. Compared to the 46 patients managed prior to 1973, the frequency of subclinical hyperparathyroidism has increased from 46% to 64%. The median patient age has increased from 50 to 59 years. Recognition of primary hyperparathyroidism in a more geriatric population modifies indications for surgical intervention in subclinical disease. Osteoporosis, myalgias,
fatigue
, arthralgias, memory loss, or constipation occurred in 50% of patients. These complaints are frequent in normocalcemic elderly people. They represent disease, not normal aging. Their exacerbation by
hypercalcemia
should not go uncorrected if neck exploration can be tolerated by the patient.
...
PMID:The changing face of primary hyperparathyroidism. 143 43
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.
...
PMID:[A case of sarcoidosis with hypercalcemia, urolithiasis, nephrocalcinosis and renal insufficiency]. 148 16
A 27-year-old man was admitted to hospital because of weight loss,
fatigue
and lack of appetite over the previous few weeks and cervical lymphadenopathy. Chest X-ray demonstrated several patchy infiltrates in both lungs. There was also evidence of progressive renal failure (creatinine concentration: 3,0 mg/dl) and
hypercalcaemia
(2,8 mmol/l). Bronchoalveolar lavage and renal biopsy confirmed sarcoidosis. Fundoscopy revealed eye involvement (several circumscribed, partly confluent, whitish nodules). Wegener's granulomatosis was excluded because no anticytoplasmic antibodies were demonstrated. Administration of steroids (at first daily 60 mg methylprednisolone) quickly resulted in a normal blood calcium level and normal renal function. These findings suggest that the early stage of sarcoidosis consists of in principle reversible functional changes. The differential diagnosis from systemic diseases is often difficult. If sarcoidosis is suspected one must search for rare organ manifestations so that therapy can be started as soon as possible.
...
PMID:[Kidney failure as a consequence of sarcoidosis]. 155 74
Several recent articles question whether patients with asymptomatic hyperparathyroidism and minimal
hypercalcemia
should be treated by parathyroidectomy. We therefore reviewed our experience in 103 consecutive patients with primary hyperparathyroidism who were treated by parathyroidectomy to determine, first, how many of these patients had asymptomatic or symptomatic hyperparathyroidism, and second, did these patients benefit from parathyroidectomy? We also analyzed the safety of parathyroidectomy in 426 consecutive patients, including 79 who required reoperation for hyperparathyroidism, specifically looking for complications and the outcome of these procedures. Our study documents the following: (1) only 2 of 103 (2%) patients referred for parathyroidectomy had "true" asymptomatic hyperparathyroidism; (2) only symptoms of
fatigue
, bone pain, and weight loss correlated with the degree of
hypercalcemia
, whereas muscular weakness, psychiatric symptoms, nocturia, polyuria, recent memory loss, constipation, and nephrolithiasis did not; (3) only 1 of 15 patients who were referred as asymptomatic were truly asymptomatic after more thorough questioning, and all 14 improved following parathyroidectomy; (4) 81% of the patients who were referred with symptoms improved following parathyroidectomy; and (5) permanent complications occurred in only 4 patients. All but 1 had reoperations for persistent or recurrent hyperparathyroidism (3 vocal cord paralyses and 1 hypoparathyroidism requiring autotransplantation of cryopreserved parathyroid tissue). There was 1 death of an 84-year-old woman with hypercalcemic crisis. Thus, most patients with hyperparathyroidism are symptomatic and benefit symptomatically and metabolically from parathyroidectomy, which is a safe operation.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and management of asymptomatic hyperparathyroidism: safety, efficacy, and deficiencies in our knowledge. 176 65
Primary hyperparathyroidism was thought 30 years ago to be a rare disease, and the diagnosis was most often made in patients presenting with either bone disease or kidney stones. Today the minority of patients with hyperparathyroidism present with such symptoms, a fact accounted for by the introduction into general medical practice three decades ago of laboratory technology for efficiently determining the serum concentrations of various blood minerals, including calcium.
Hypercalcemia
was detected more frequently, and it was realized that most patients with hyperparathyroidism either had minor symptoms, such as constipation, polyuria,
tiredness
, and muscle weakness, or they were "asymptomatic" and indistinguishable from normal subjects. It was thought that primary hyperparathyroidism was a progressive disease and that sooner or later all patients would become symptomatic and require parathyroidectomy. Since this operation was curative in a high percentage of cases, it was recommended for virtually all patients once the diagnosis was established. In this contribution the long-term benefits of parathyroidectomy in patients with and without symptoms from primary hyperparathyroidism are reviewed. It is concluded that a multicenter prospective randomized trial is needed to resolve the indications for operative and nonoperative management of patients with this disease.
...
PMID:Surgical therapy of patients with primary hyperparathyroidism: long-term benefits. 176 66
Over the last 25 years, the perceived clinical spectrum of primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) has changed dramatically from a disorder characterized by severe bone and renal disease to one typically manifested by few or mild symptoms and little evidence of organ damage. Reasons for this change in spectrum include changing demographics (primary HPT is primarily a disease of the middle-aged and elderly), diffusion of medical knowledge leading to a higher index of suspicion, and improved clinical laboratory technology (especially inexpensive and accurate determination of serum calcium and parathyroid hormone). In the first 343 cases of primary HPT seen at the Massachusetts General Hospital, 57% had renal stones, 23% had hyperparathyroid bone disease, and less than 1% had no symptoms. By contrast, studies dating from the availability of automated serum calcium measurement found renal stones and hyperparathyroid bone disease in less than 5% of cases, and about half of cases had few or no symptoms. Most patients with primary HPT today have mild, nonspecific symptoms, such as weakness,
fatigue
, and mental depression, and such signs as arterial hypertension and osteopenia, and detection of their
hypercalcemia
is generally serendipitous. The mildness and slow progression seen in many cases of primary HPT has resulted in much controversy about appropriate management.
...
PMID:Clinical spectrum of primary hyperparathyroidism: evolution with changes in medical practice and technology. 176 71
A phase I multicenter evaluation of a novel antiestrogen, toremifene, was undertaken in postmenopausal women with various advanced difficult-to-treat malignancies. One hundred and seven women were treated at one of six dosage levels (10, 20, 40, 60, 200, or 400 mg/d orally) for at least 8 weeks. Weekly evaluations for toxicity were conducted. The most common side effects were nausea (31%), vomiting (12%), and hot flashes (29%). Five patients were removed from the study for possible adverse reactions: three patients experienced
hypercalcemia
; one experienced tremulousness,
fatigue
, and inability to think clearly; and one had vaginal bleeding. Twelve patients died while on study, 11 with disease progression and one with a pulmonary embolus. Sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) levels increased and there was a modest decline in serum antithrombin III levels. Four of 48 assessable patients had partial responses: three with breast cancer and one with endometrial cancer. Toremifene was generally well tolerated at the doses tested.
...
PMID:Phase I study of toremifene in patients with advanced cancer. 183 8
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
A 50-year-old man presented with knee pain and general
fatigue
and was found to have severe
hypercalcemia
and renal failure. Hyperparathyroidism was suspected by
hypercalcemia
and a nodular lesion of the thyroid gland with CT-scan of the patient's neck. Exploration of the neck disclosed two slightly enlarged parathyroid glands. After surgery, the patient's serum calcium levels remained normal for two weeks, but after that his serum calcium levels rose again and renal failure continued. So needle biopsy of the kidney was enforced, and myeloma of the kidney was suspected. Multiple myeloma was diagnosed by bone marrow puncture.
...
PMID:[Multiple myeloma in a patient with primary hyperparathyroidism]. 268 49
A 58-year-old man, born in Nagasaki prefecture, was admitted to our hospital because of anorexia and general
fatigue
on November 22, 1984. Hepatosplenomegaly was found without skin eruption. The blood examination on admission revealed leukocytosis (50,800/microliter) and atypical lymphocytes with hyperlobulated nuclei. He had
hypercalcemia
, and hepatic and renal damage. A diagnosis of adult T cell leukemia (ATL) in the acute stage was made. Treatment with KM2210, a conjugate of chlorambucil and estradiol, was started, and his peripheral leukocytes decreased gradually reaching, 19,700/microliter by the end of this medication. His leukocyte count continued to decrease after discontinuation of KM2210 and reached a nadir of 4,700/microliter. Hepatosplenomegaly and
hypercalcemia
also improved. About one month later, recurrence of the disease occurred and he was again treated with KM2210. Although the second course of the KM2210 therapy was also successful in relieving hepatosplenomegaly and leukocytosis, it proved impossible to ameliorate his poor condition and he died of DIC. Our case suggests that KM2210 has a remarkable cytotoxic effect against ATL cells even in the acute stage but the optimal schedule of treatment with this new drug should be established in order to obtain more satisfactory therapeutic results.
...
PMID:[A case of adult T cell leukemia treated with a new chemotherapeutic agent, KM2210]. 287 13
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