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

Sarcoidosis is a systemic granulomatous disorder of unknown cause. It has protean manifestations and can affect any organ, including bones, joints, muscles, and vessels. This article reviews the most recent information on the immunologic and inflammatory pathogenesis of sarcoidosis and its implications for therapy. Sarcoidosis results from an overexuberant T cell-mediated immune response to the unknown antigen. This antigen presentation/T cell antigen recognition event occurs in a microenvironment that is suffused in proinflammatory cytokines and growth factors that promote cell attraction, adhesion, permeability changes, further cytokine production, and release. An amplified cellular immune response ensues, leading to granuloma formation and fibrosis. The article summarizes the new developments in the medical literature related to the rheumatologic manifestations and their detection and management in sarcoidosis patients. Osseous involvement in sarcoidosis is often underdiagnosed because it can be asymptomatic. New imaging techniques improve detection. Management of osteoporosis in sarcoidosis patients requires special attention because these patients often have an underlying disorder in calcium metabolism that results in hypercalcuria and hypercalcemia. Joint manifestations, such as the classic Lofgren syndrome with accompanying erythema nodosum, may be self-limited or may become chronic, presenting an ongoing therapeutic challenge. Sarcoidosis vasculitis can be devastating, affecting virtually any vessel in any organ and causing significant morbidity. Muscle involvement, like the bony involvement, is underdiagnosed. Symptoms of muscle weakness, aches, tenderness, and fatigue should prompt consideration of occult sarcoid myositis, often with accompanying neurogenic atrophy. Sarcoidosis treatment usually starts with a period of observation before pharmacologic intervention. Corticosteroids remain the first-line therapy. Alternatives to corticosteroids are often introduced either because of steroid intolerance or in an attempt to reduce steroid dose and side effects. The advantages and disadvantages of these second line therapies are reviewed. Medical vigilance, with attention to new patient symptoms, is important in the management of sarcoidosis, because of the tendency of this disease to present in so many and diverse patterns.
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PMID:Sarcoidosis: immunology, rheumatic involvement, and therapeutics. 1114 21

Hypercalcemia is a rare complication of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), usually seen in the accelerated or blastic phases of the disease and associated with a poor prognosis. T-cell lymphoid phenotype is also an infrequent finding in the blast crisis (BC) of CML. A CML patient who had hypercalcemia as the presenting feature of a T-cell BC is reported. She was a 78 year-old woman who, at four months of CML diagnosis, developed weakness, bone pain, and mental confusion, with hypercalcemia being subsequently found. Although the peripheral blood and bone marrow were consistent with the chronic phase of CML, mediastinal enlargement, a soft tissue mass adjacent to the iliac bone, and multiple osteolytic lesions were seen. Serum levels of parathyroid hormone (PTH) and PTH-related peptide were normal, whereas the search for a second neoplasm was negative. The hypercalcemia initially responded to conventional treatment, but it reappeared two weeks later. Coincidentally, a high proportion of blast cells of T-cell origin at the cortical thymocyte stage were observed in the patient's peripheral blood and bone marrow, and she died shortly afterwards.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia as the presenting feature of t-cell lymphoid blast crisis of ph-positive chronic myeloid leukemia. 1134 75

An 80-year-old white woman who presented with fatigue, weakness, weight loss, constipation and polydipsia is reported. The patient was given a diagnosis of severe hypercalcemia and was subsequently found to have clinical, roentgenographic and pathological evidence of hepatocellular carcinoma. Further studies revealed a low parathyroid hormone level, excluding the possibility of primary hyperparathyroidism, and a negative bone survey, precluding metastatic bone disease. The patient's hypercalcemia was believed to emanate from the humoral secretion of a parathyroid hormone-related peptide, which was found to be elevated, and was abated with conservative management while her cancer was being treated with chemotherapy. The details of this rarely documented presentation, which can easily be mistaken for hepatic encephalopathy, are provided.
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PMID:Severe hypercalcemia as an initial presenting manifestation of hepatocellular carcinoma. 1236 13

Multiple myeloma (MM) is a plasma cell malignancy characterized by infiltration of bone marrow, bone destruction, infiltration of soft tissues with plasma cells, and suppression of normal hematopoiesis. The production of monoclonal immunoglobulins with or without light chains is a major feature of the disease. Full spectrum of plasma cell dyscrasias include monoclonal gammapathy of undetermined significance, smouldering myeloma, indolent multiple myeloma, and fully developed, symptomatic multiple myeloma. The usual presenting features of MM include bone pain, weakness, fatigue, fever and infection. Neurologic symptoms are less common but one must not forget that MM may present with a neurologic disease. Careful neurologic history and examination are mandatory in patients with MM. Neurologic symptoms may be a direct manifestation of MM or may be due to the immune effect of monoclonal proteins directed against different neural structures. Finally, metabolic consequences (uremia, hypercalcemia, hyperviscosity) of MM may produce a broad spectrum of different neurologic symptoms including headache, blurring of vision, drowsiness, precoma, coma, vertigo, ataxia, hemiparesis and epileptiform seizures. The most common location of bone changes in MM is the thoracic spine, where it causes osteolytic changes with consequent compressive fractures. The most disastrous sequel is paraplegia. Multiple vertebral involvement with the evidence of osteolytic changes in other bones is usual, but solitary vertebral myeloma may occur. Myeloma usually involves the bone of the vertebral body and then spreads into the extradural space. However, patients with solitary extradural myeloma have been reported. Skull myeloma is frequently asymptomatic. It may grow externally or, rarely, there is intracranial expansion. Involvement of the cranial nerves is not rare, with II, V, VI, VII and VIII cranial nerves being most often affected. Isolated intracerebral plasmacytomas are extremely rare. Diagnostic approach includes plain X-rays of the skeleton, which was found to be the method of choice for demonstration of osteolytic changes, whereas magnetic resonance with gadolinium enhancement most reliably displays the degree of vertebral involvement and demonstrates any associated soft tissue mass. Current treatment of osteolytic changes in multiple myeloma include chemotherapy, radiotherapy in combination with dexamethasone, monthly infusions of bisphosphonates, surgical decompression, and kyphoplasty. Therapeutic approach is dictated by the presenting symptoms. In case of pain as the predominant symptom, treatment with chemotherapy and radiotherapy may be appropriate. Compressive symptoms are relieved with dexamethasone followed by radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Surgical decompression is used in patients with vertebral collapse and vertebral instability. Kyphoplasty is a new method used in the treatment of osteolytic changes of vertebral bodies. A viscous cement is injected into the cavity by a balloon-like inflatable bone tampon. It has been successfully employed to improve the quality of life, to reduce pain, and to increase overall functioning in patients with vertebral compression fractures by restoring most of the original height of the vertebral body. Bisphosphonates reduce pain associated with osteolytic changes in multiple myeloma, but also significantly reduce skeletal events (pathologic fracture, spinal cord compression, surgery or irradiation of bone) via unknown mechanism. It seems that bisphosphonates, by inhibiting bone resorption, alter the microenvironment in which the MM cells grow.
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PMID:[Neurologic sequelae of bone changes in multiple myeloma and its therapy]. 1263 Mar 41

The extrarenal manifestations of hypernephroma in 34 medical patients are described, and the literature on this subject is reviewed. One case presented with hematuria and 11 other cases with metastases. Presentation was not obviously related to metastases in 22 patients. Eight were first seen because of fever or general weakness. Vascular disturbances in six included hypertension, thrombophlebitis, inferior vena caval obstruction and varicocele. Four patients had gastrointestinal complaints; one had hypercalcemia and another musculoskeletal symptoms. Two cases had neurological syndromes, one of which proved to be due to metastases. The overall incidence of systemic features was greater and included anemia, eosinophilia, a leukemoid reaction and thrombocytosis. Polycythemia, amyloidosis and hyponatremia were not encountered. Urographic procedures were performed in half of the patients, most of whom had an abdominal mass. Calcium was visible radiologically in the tumour in five cases. The diagnosis was not made in 19 and was an unexpected finding at autopsy in 10. Appreciation of the extrarenal manifestations of hypernephroma might lead to earlier diagnosis.
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PMID:The extrarenal manifestations of hypernephroma. 1394 85

We report the case of a 63-year-old man who presented with weakness, fatigue, dehydration, confusion, abdominal pain, congestive heart failure and hypercalcemia. He expired and autopsy revealed an exulcerating carcinoma of the esophagus, invading the esophageal wall and metastasizing to the lungs, skin and lymph nodes. Histology demonstrated an epithelial tumor consisting of two components with transition between the two. One component was a keratinizing squamous cell carcinoma, whereas the other component consisted of pleomorphic small cells. The hypercalcemia was assumed to be due to parathyroid hormone related protein (PHRP), which was demonstrated by immunohistochemistry only in the pleomorphic small cells and not in the squamous cells. PHRP induced humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy is most often associated with squamous cell carcinomas. The finding that in our case, the pleomorphic small cell component was PHRP immunopositive and the squamous cell component showed no immunoreactivity, is intriguing and remains unexplained.
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PMID:Humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy due to bipartite squamous cell/small cell carcinoma of the esophagus immunoreactive for parathyroid hormone related protein. 1464

Primary hyperparathyroidism is the most frequent cause of hypercalcemia in ambulatory patients. The condition is most common in postmenopausal women, although it can occur in persons of all ages, including pregnant women. If symptoms are present, they are attributable to hypercalcemia and may include weakness, easy fatigability, anorexia, or anxiety. However, most persons have no symptoms, and primary hyperparathyroidism usually is diagnosed after an elevated serum calcium level is found incidentally on multiphasic chemistry panel testing. Persistent hypercalcemia and an elevated serum parathyroid hormone level are the diagnostic criteria for primary hyperparathyroidism. Other causes of hypercalcemia are rare, and usually are associated with low (or sometimes normal) parathyroid hormone levels. Malignancy is the most frequent cause of hypercalcemia in hospitalized patients. Parathyroidectomy is the definitive treatment for primary hyperparathyroidism. When performed by experienced endocrine surgeons, the procedure has success rates of 90 to 95 percent and a low rate of complications. Asymptomatic patients who decline surgery and meet criteria for medical management must commit to conscientious long-term monitoring. Any unexplained elevation of the serum calcium level should be evaluated promptly to prevent complications from hypercalcemia.
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PMID:Hyperparathyroidism. 1566 24

Oncology nurses are responsible for the ongoing assessment of hypercalcemia, including reviewing laboratory findings as well as evaluating patient symptomatology. Abnormal serum creatinine, calcium, electrolytes, magnesium, and phosphate levels and symptoms such as constipation, lethargy, and weakness may alert clinicians to problems with this oncologic emergency. Resolution of hypercalcemia is highly successful when appropriately monitored and treated and leads to a better quality of life and improved patient outcomes.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia of malignancy: Part II. 1520 32

Primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT), caused by solitary parathyroid adenomas in 85% of cases and diffuse hyperplasia in most of the remaining cases, overproduces parathyroid hormone (PTH), which mobilizes calcium to the blood stream. Renal stones, osteoporosis and diffuse symptoms of hypercalcaemia, such as constipation, fatigue and weakness are well-known complications. However, in Western Europe and North America, patients with pHPT are nowadays usually discovered during an early, asymptomatic phase of the disease. It has been reported that patients suffering from symptomatic pHPT have increased mortality, mainly due to an overrepresentation of cardiovascular death. pHPT is reported to be associated with hypertension, disturbances in the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, and structural and functional alterations in the vascular wall. Recently, studies have indicated an association between pHPT and heart disease, and studies in vitro have produced a number of theoretical approaches. An increased prevalence of cardiac structural abnormalities such as left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and valvular and myocardial calcification has been observed. Associations have been found between PTH and LVH, and between LVH and serum calcium. LV systolic function does not seem to be affected in patients with pHPT, whereas any influence on LV diastolic performance needs further evaluation. The aim of this review is to clarify the connection between pHPT and cardiac disease.
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PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism and heart disease--a review. 1547 92

We report a case of extreme hypercalcaemia associated with a parathyroid adenoma in a young man. The patient presented with classical symptoms of a hypercalcaemic syndrome, and serum calcium and parathyroid hormone levels were 6.92 mmol L(-1) and 70.2 pmol L(-1) respectively. After stabilizing the patient and reducing the calcium level, a parathyroidectomy was performed. The postoperative course was uneventful with rapidly resolving clinical symptoms. Hypercalcaemic crisis is a rare but life-threatening complication of primary hyperparathyroidism. It should be suspected in acutely ill patients complaining of muscular weakness, gastrointestinal and cerebral symptoms. To reduce mortality, it is essential to correctly diagnose the condition without delay and provide appropriate emergency management correcting hypercalcaemia and dehydration. Successful parathyroidectomy quickly relieves symptoms and prevents recurrence.
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PMID:Surviving extreme hypercalcaemia--a case report and review of the literature. 1595 36


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