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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (
hypercalcemia
)
10,293
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixty-eight patients with plasmacytic neoplasia and osteosclerotic lesions were analyzed. Men predominated in this series. Mean age was 55.3 years and 26 patients were younger than 51 years at diagnosis. Early onset of disease was statistically different from multiple myeloma in general. Thirty patients had peripheral polyneuropathy and often neurological manifestations preceded other symptoms. Skeletal pain was less common, whereas hepatomegaly,
splenomegaly
, and lymphadenopathy were more common than in myeloma in general. Incidence of azotemia,
hypercalcemia
, high ESR, and anemia was lower than in myeloma. In one fourth of the patients, the number of skeletal lesions did not exceed three. Mean survival was less than 20 months from first symptom and 12 months from diagnosis. Mortality was related sometimes to polyneuropathy. Thus, in several aspects, plasmacytic neoplasia with osteosclerotic lesions is different from the classical multiple myeloma.
...
PMID:Plasma cell neoplasia with osteosclerotic lesions. A study of five cases and a review of the literature. 22 10
A young man had a mild, slightly progressive pulmonary sarcoidosis. After 4 years he developed an acute disease with
splenomegaly
, anemia, marked elevation of ESR,
hypercalcemia
and mild renal insufficiency. The anemia and ESR elevation disappeared after splenectomy, whereas the
hypercalcemia
still needs corticosteroid treatment. Attempts to withdraw this treatment resulted in recurrence of the
hypercalcemia
, but no other abnormalities. In contrast to other organs examined, the sarcoid tissue in the spleen revealed necrosis formation, consistent with a recent process. A Kveim antigen preparation from the spleen was less potent than antigen from mediastinal lymph nodes. It is suggested that the acute phase of the disease involved mainly the spleen. Speculations about the possible role of infectious agent(s) are put forward.
...
PMID:Acute phase of sarcoidosis with splenomegaly and hypercalcemia. Description of a case, including a report about splenectomy and the preparation and testing of a Kveim antigen from the spleen. 69 75
Sarcoidosis of bone has been observed in 29 patients for up to 43 years. It was present in the hands and/or feet in 26 patients, in the nasal bone in three and once each in the hard palate and temporal bones. There were three types of bone lesion: (a) lytic in 25 patients; rounded cortical or medullary lesions ranging in size from 1 mm to 1 cm in diameter, which on healing left a residual punched-out 'cyst'; (b) permeative in nine patients; these showed progressive cortical 'tunnelling' with remodelling of trabecular and cortical architecture; (c) destructive in three patients: rapidly progressive with pathological fractures and secondary joint surface involvement. Soft tissue swelling preceded the radiological abnormality for up to four yearts in 10 patients, accompanied it twice, followed it once and was absent on 16 (55 percent) occasions. Bone involvement was usually an incidental finding when sarcoidosis presented elsewhere. Other features included intrathoracic sarcoid (86 per cent), lupus pernio (48 per cent), skin plaques (41 per cent), ocular inflammation (48 per cent), nasal mucosal disease (24 per cent), lymphadenopathy (24 per cent), hepatomegaly (13 per cent),
splenomegaly
(10 per cent), and parotid enlargement (10 per cent). Pulmonary infiltration with or without lymphadenopathy was observed in three fifths and hilar adenopathy alone in one third of patients. Abnormalities in chest radiographs of patients with bone sarcoid resolved in only 20 per cent. Hypercalciuria was noted in one and
hypercalcaemia
in the other two patients with bone distruction.
...
PMID:Sarcoidosis of bone. 86 75
Sarcoidosis is being increasingly recognised in Kuwait. Twenty patients were studied over three years and the clinical, biochemical and radiological data were analysed. The clinical profile revealed thoracic involvement in all the patients as well as constitutional symptoms (50%), arthralgia (55%), arthritis (15%), chest infection (35%), tuberculosis (10%),
hypercalcaemia
(5%), angina (15%) and hypertension (20%). None had central nervous system manifestations. Other clinical signs were erythema nodosum (25%), hepatomegaly (30%)
splenomegaly
(15%) and chest signs (25%), together with salivary gland (15%), skin (15%), eye (15%), and cardiac involvement (5%). The tuberculin test was negative in all those tested. The patients were classified radiologically into stage I (55%), stage II (40%) and stage III (5%) of the disease. The clinical profile was similar to the Western pattern of the disease, but there were several differences including an older age group, more frequent constitutional symptoms, the rarity of ocular and central nervous system involvement, and initial presentation as a chest infection. Therapy with steroids alone or steroids and azathioprine was used when appropriate and the response to therapy monitored.
...
PMID:Sarcoidosis in Arabs: the clinical profile of 20 patients and review of the literature. 166 42
A 44-year-old Aborigine with Adult T-cell Leukaemia/Lymphoma (ATLL) due to HTLV-I is reported. He presented with transverse myelitis of subacute onset, and subsequently developed frank T-cell leukaemia complicated by
splenomegaly
and
hypercalcaemia
. Cell surface marker studies showed a phenotype of CD3+ CD4+ CD8- CD25+, and serological and molecular studies confirmed HTLV-I infection. This is the first report of ATLL in an Australian Aborigine.
...
PMID:Adult T-cell leukaemia lymphoma in an aborigine. 175 23
A link between hyperparathyroidism and the growth of hematopoietic stem cells is suggested by this report of a parathyroid carcinoma with polycythemia vera. A 56-year-old white woman presented with
splenomegaly
, a palpable neck mass and
hypercalcemia
, recurrent six years after resection of a parathyroid tumor. She had pancytosis with a subnormal serum concentration of erythropoietin. Radiographs showed subperiosteal erosions an dosteopenia. Nephrocalcinosis was absent. Bone biopsy showed a decreased cortical width with many intracortical osteoclasts. The cancellous bone area remained normal, but the osteoid area/bone area, osteoblast perimeter and osteoclast perimeter were increased. At surgery, a parathyroid carcinoma was found in the same location operated on previously. As in two other reported cases, postoperative improvement in the
hypercalcemia
was associated with remission of the blood dyscrasia. A novel finding in this case is that when the
hypercalcemia
eventually recurred, it was again accompanied by pancytosis. With bisphosphonate therapy, the serum intact parathyroid hormone level increased in response to a decrease in the ionized calcium level, indicating that the cancer was not autonomous. This case suggests that in the presence of the ionized
hypercalcemia
, the parathyroid tumor may have produced or induced production of a growth factor that can stimulate pancytosis. The differential diagnosis of polycythemia and
hypercalcemia
should be expanded to include parathyroid tumors in addition to hepatic, adrenal, renal, and ovarian neoplasms.
...
PMID:Parathyroid carcinoma associated with polycythemia vera. 179 72
A case of acute adult T-cell leukemia-lymphoma (ATLL) was observed in northeast Italy, presenting with fever, lymphadenomegaly,
splenomegaly
,
hypercalcemia
and renal failure. Leukaemic cells were morphologically typical, expressed a T-cell CD4+ phenotype, did not display any helper functions, and grew in vitro under supply of exogenous interleukin-2. Antibodies to human T-cell lymphotropic virus (HTLV-I) were found in the serum, and the virus was isolated from leukaemic cells. The family members who could be tested were seronegative. The patient had never travelled outside Italy, had never received blood transfusions and did not belong to any known categories at risk of viral disease transmission. Present knowledge of the epidemiology of HTLV-I infection warns that other cases of HTLV-I induced disease are expected to occur outside already recognised endemic areas. This case suggests that untraceable, presumably short-term exposures can also account for HTLV-I transmission.
...
PMID:HTLV-I positive adult T-cell leukaemia-lymphoma: report of a typical case from Italy. 198 Apr 80
The clinical, pathologic, and immunologic features of 78 cases of peripheral/post-thymic T-cell lymphomas are described. These neoplasms were extremely heterogeneous and were classified as small lymphocytic, mixed small and large cell, large cell, lymphoepithelioid cell, angiocentric, and adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma type. Some cases revealed angioimmunoblastic or Hodgkin's-like features. These neoplasms mainly affected older adults (mean age, 57 years; median age, 60 years). Lymphadenopathy represented the most frequent clinical presentation, although most patients demonstrated both nodal (87%) and extranodal involvement (77%) during the course of disease. Sites of extranodal disease included skin/soft tissue, spleen, lung, liver, bone, gastrointestinal tract, central nervous system, peripheral blood, nasopharynx, and retrovaginal tissue.
Splenomegaly
at presentation was most frequently observed in lymphoepithelioid cell lymphomas. Angiocentric lymphomas involved lung. A mediastinal presentation was typically observed in young adults and associated with a poor prognosis. Patients with gastrointestinal lymphomas presented with bleeding and/or malabsorption. B symptoms were present in most cases (65%).
Hypercalcemia
occurred in four patients. Phenotypic studies of T-cell antigens demonstrated the loss of one or more pan-T-cell markers in eight of 47 cases evaluated. Assessment of T-cell subsets revealed a helper/inducer phenotype for nearly all immunoreactive cases. For the overall series, 32 patients died of disease (median survival time, 11.5 mo). There was a statistical difference between the combined groups of small lymphocytic and lymphoepithelioid cell types as compared with mixed and large cell types, with a poorer survival for the latter group. Angiocentric and adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma were associated with poor survival. This series of T-cell lymphomas further documents the marked heterogeneity of this group of neoplasms as well as the poor prognosis observed for certain histologic types.
...
PMID:Peripheral/post-thymic T-cell lymphomas: a spectrum of disease. Clinical, pathologic, and immunologic features of 78 cases. 229 66
Sixteen Italian patients with chronic T-cell lymphocytic leukaemia (T-CLL) and leukaemic T-helper phenotype lymphocytes (Thp-CLL) were investigated for serum antibodies against human T-cell leukaemia virus I (HTLV-I) or its integrated DNA sequences. Common features of this series of patients were an aggressive clinical course with poor response to treatment, high white blood-cell count, bone-marrow infiltration,
splenomegaly
, and chromosome abnormalities. Three patients had skin infiltration and one had
hypercalcaemia
. Immunological analysis showed a Thp (OKT4+) in all cases, and a heterogeneity, within the OKT4 population, of phenotypes and functional activities. Three patients had either HTLV-I integrated DNA sequences or anti-HTLV-I serum antibodies, or both. These patients had not received any blood transfusions, denied intimate contact with foreigners, and had always lived in small towns of central or southern Italy. Clinical and immunological findings in this series of patients suggest that both HTLV-I related and unrelated cases of Thp-CLL should be regarded as one disease arising from the same subpopulation of mature T-lymphocytes.
...
PMID:T-helper phenotype chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and "adult T-cell leukaemia" in Italy. Endemic HTLV-I-related T-cell leukaemias in southern Europe. 286 33
Sarcoidosis, a granulomatous disease of unknown etiology, is most often seen in young adults. Childhood cases have been reported primarily from Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Thirty children have been seen in Arkansas between 1957 and 1982, which suggests that the endemic area for childhood sarcoidosis should include both the south central and southeastern United States. The median age was 11 years; 29/30 were black; and 90% were symptomatic, 60% with systemic symptoms. Manifestations included abnormal chest roentgenograms (100%), restrictive pulmonary functions (79%), lymphadenopathy (63%),
splenomegaly
(40%), skin lesions (30%), granulomatous uveitis (27%), hyperglobulinemia (72%), and
hypercalcemia
(30%). Course and prognosis were similar to those in adults at follow-up of two to 11 years. Four with uveitis had serious residua in the eyes, three had crippling restrictive lung disease, and two died of respiratory failure. Sarcoidosis seems to be an immunologic response to an unknown inhaled antigen, probably present in the southeastern and south central US.
...
PMID:Childhood sarcoidosis in Arkansas. 398 64
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