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

The second reported case of carcinoma of the parathyroid gland in a child 15 years of age or younger is presented. This case is also remarkable in its extremely unusual presentation with seizures, theorized to be associated with hypercalcemia and/or a negative magnesium balance.
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PMID:Parathyroid carcinoma in a child: unusual presentation with seizures. 672 79

Central nervous system disorders are not uncommon in patients with hyperparathyroidism and hypercalcaemia. Usually these consist of neuropsychiatric disturbances but acute encephalopathies and seizures may occur. A rare manifestation is cerebral infarction. A patient is presented with neuroradiological evidence of infarction caused by cerebral arterial spasm which appears related to hypercalcaemia due to hypervitaminosis D. Arterial spasm is suggested as a possible aetiological factor in focal neurological lesions associated with hypercalcaemia.
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PMID:Hypercalcaemia associated with cerebral vasospasm causing infarction. 696 41

A 36-year-old with end-stage renal disease secondary to hypertensive nephrosclerosis had a two-day history of epigastric pain and nausea. Soon after admission, multiple grand mal seizures uncontrolled by intravenous phenytoin sodium and diazepam developed. His calcium level was 14 mg/dL and his amylase level was 2,230 mg/dL; lumbar puncture was normal. Hemodialysis lowered his calcium level to 10.7 mg/dL but failed to control his seizures. Secondary hyperparathyroidism was thought to be the cause of his malignant hypercalcemia, and an emergency subtotal parathyroidectomy was performed. Postoperatively, his grand mal seizures resolved. Confusion and aphasia also developed, but they resolved over the ensuing three weeks. Microscopic examination of the parathyroid glands revealed diffuse chief cell hyperplasia. Preoperative parathormone level was 2,196 pg/dL (normal, less than 450 pg/dL). A review of the literature has failed to reveal a similar case.
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PMID:Secondary hyperparathyroidism manifesting as acute pancreatitis and status epilepticus. 728 72

Primary hypoparathyroidism was diagnosed in six dogs with profound hypocalcemia. Muscle tremors, tetany, generalized seizures, ataxia, and behavioral aberrations were the most common clinical signs. Lymphocytic parathyroiditis was found in four of five dogs that were biopsied. The serum concentration of immunoreactive parathyroid hormone was abnormally low in one dog in which it was measured. Treatment with vitamin D and calcium was successful in restoring and maintaining normal concentration of serum calcium in all six dogs. During treatment, large daily doses of vitamin D were required, dose response was unpredictable, serum calcium concentration fluctuated while treatment remained unchanged, and hypercalcemia occurred frequently.
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PMID:Primary hypoparathyroidism in the dog. 735 61

The clinical, laboratory and EEG findings of 4 uremic patients on hemodialysis who accidently developed acute hypercalcemia were reviewed. An acute central nervous system syndrome developed, associated with the clinical changes of disorientation, dysarthria, seizures, myoclonic jerks, hallucinations, irritability, confusion, memory and judgment defects plus bizarre behavior. The EEG findings demonstrated diffusely severe slow background activity in all tracings. In addition, the EEG abnormalities as well as the clinical findings disappeared when serum calcium returned to normal. Hypercalcemia, a reversible condition, seems to have been the cause of this clinical syndrome which should be differentiated from dialysis dementia, a condition known to be irreversible and fatal.
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PMID:Acute hypercalcemia in hemodialysis patients: distinction from 'dialysis dementia'. 738 36

Primary hyperparathyroidism frequently has a chronic and relatively benign course. Occasionally, however, it may have a stormy presentation requiring prompt adequate diagnosis and urgent surgical treatment. We describe a 71-year-old woman who had severe hypercalcemia, seizures, and coma refractory to treatment with anticonvulsant drugs, intravenous infusion of normal saline, furosemide, glucocorticoids, calcitonin, and hemodialysis. Bone roentgenograms were normal, but a strikingly positive bone scan that also showed marked soft-tissue uptake prompted the diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism and the successful surgical removal of a large parathyroid adenoma. This was followed by a remarkable recovery and marked reduction in soft-tissue radioactive uptake on bone scan. The association of hypercalcemia and seizures and the diagnostic value of bone scanning are discussed. An up-to-date review of the literature is presented. We proposed this condition to be named "parathyroid storm" on the basis of the rapid and lethal course unless surgery is performed without delay.
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PMID:Parathyroid storm. 739 15

Neonatal hypocalcemia secondary to maternal hypercalcemia is relatively rare. We describe two infants with hypocalcemia and generalized seizures at 2 weeks and at 5 days of age, respectively. In the first case the infant was delivered of a mother who was subsequently diagnosed as having hyperparathyroidism. In the second case the infant was a member of a kindred with familial benign hypercalcemia. The evaluation of late-onset neonatal hypocalcemia should include an evaluation of maternal hyperparathyroidism and, in some cases, an evaluation for familial calcium disorders.
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PMID:Symptomatic hypocalcemia and hypoparathyroidism in two infants of mothers with hyperparathyroidism and familial benign hypercalcemia. 897 97

Oncologic emergencies can occur in cancer patients who have a good prognosis. In all of them, the challenge to the clinician is to diagnose and treat before irreversible complications occur. In febrile patients with neutropenia, cultures of body fluids should be obtained and therapy should be started immediately with broad-spectrum antibiotics. If spinal cord compression is suspected, either magnetic resonance spectroscopy or complete myelography can be done to confirm the diagnosis. Prompt workup in cancer patients with headaches or seizures may avoid neurologic consequences. For brain metastases, immediate treatment with dexamethasone (Decadron, Dexone, Hexadrol) is indicated. For hypercalcemia, a number of drugs that inhibit bone resorption, resulting in lower serum calcium levels, are now available. Malignant cardiac tamponade is relatively rare but potentially lethal; emergency pericardiocentesis often results in marked improvement.
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PMID:Oncologic emergencies. Treating acute problems resulting from cancer and chemotherapy. 827 94

Common thyroid and parathyroid disorders present with reversible neurologic signs and symptoms affecting the central and peripheral nervous system, musculature, and mental function. Patients with thyrotoxicosis may have myopathy, spasticity, seizures, and multiple psychiatric symptoms. A deficiency of thyroid hormone also causes muscle weakness and may be accompanied by reversible muscle hypertrophy or movement disorders. The chronic hypercalcemia that develops secondary to hyperparathyroidism produces many psychiatric and cognitive symptoms, as well as a reversible myopathy. Calcium deficiency leads to neuromuscular irritability, paresthesias, and tetany. Psychiatric disorders are also common in this disorder.
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PMID:Neurologic complications of thyroid and parathyroid disease. 841 21

Although hypercalcemia may cause drowsiness, lethargy, weakness, confusion and coma it rarely causes seizures or cerebral infarction. The patient presented had a clinical evolution from hallucinosis to a generalized tonic-clonic seizure, and subsequent cortical blindness with occipital cerebral ischemia as evidenced by SPECT and MRI scans. EEG revealed occipital PLEDs. With reversal of hypercalcemia, there was a return of vision, resolution of EEG epileptiform activity, although with some residual occipital infarction. This case, in concert with a literature review of hypercalcemia, reveals examples of occipital and watershed ischemia, blindness, seizures and hypertension, a pattern markedly similar to that of eclampsia. Furthermore, medications such as magnesium sulfate, believed to reverse cerebrovasospasm responsible for the eclamptic neurologic findings, may counter the effects of hypercalcemia at a cellular level, lending support to a calcium-mediated injury in eclampsia.
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PMID:Reversible hypercalcemic cerebral vasoconstriction with seizures and blindness: a paradigm for eclampsia? 966 11


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