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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (
hypercalcemia
)
10,293
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Renal failure is frequently associated with osteodystrophia due to secondary hyperparathyreoidism and/or increased aluminum intake. The problem of
hypercalcemia
and hyperphosphatemia can more easily controlled by CAPD than by hemodialysis. Total serum and ionized calcium levels are rapidly normalized by a CAPD regime of four 2-1 exchanges with 1.75 mmol/l Ca. Under the same CAPD regime 250-300 mg phosphate are removed per day. Depending on the ingestion of phosphate, 100-200 mg phosphate per day remain to be removed by phosphate binding agents. Since the main source of aluminum in CAPD patients is oral ingestion of aluminum-containing phosphate binders, serum levels should be regulated by diet and calcium carbonate. To suppress PTH secretion serum ionized calcium levels need to be maintained at the upper limit of normal. This can also be achieved by the use of oral calcium carbonate.
Vitamin D
or analogs should be prescribed only when clinically indicated by persistent hypocalcemia, osteitis fibrosa or non-aluminum related osteomalacia.
...
PMID:Renal osteodystrophy and aluminum bone disease in CAPD patients. 305 62
The authors report a case of acute severe
hypercalcemia
(5.20 mmol/l) in a 9-month-old boy.
Vitamin D
poisoning is confirmed by high serum level of 25 OHD (287 mcg/l; N = 10-60) while the source of intoxication is unknown. Individual idiopathic vitamin D hypersensitivity is eliminated because of a negative diagnosis test. Management with prednisone, high intravenous fluid saline intake, furosemide and calcitonin results in a favourable outcome.
Vitamin D
intoxication has always to be evoked when acute severe
hypercalcemia
occurs in infants.
...
PMID:[Severe acute hypercalcemia in a child caused by accidental vitamin D poisoning]. 306 26
A 45-year-old female manifested lower abdominal fullness and symptoms of
hypercalcemia
with nausea, vomiting, and thirst. Physical examination showed a right ovarian mass and laboratory data demonstrated
hypercalcemia
(14.6 mg/dl). The radiographic findings confirmed a right ovarian tumor without any evidence of bone metastasis. Tests revealed that her PTH, nephrogenic urinary cyclic AMP, and 1-25 (OH)2
Vitamin D
were not high but that her prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) was elevated. After correction of her calcium elevation with infusion and prednisolone, right oophorectomy with tumor excision was performed. A histological examination of the tumor revealed a mucinous cysto-adenocarcinoma. The postoperative course has been uneventful, with normal calcium and PGE2 values. This case illustrates that
hypercalcemia
associated with an ovarian carcinoma (Malignancy-associated
hypercalcemia
) can be mediated by the patient's PGE2 in part.
...
PMID:[A case of hypercalcemia with ovarian carcinoma]. 323 Jun 42
Hypotonia, neonatal respiratory distress with a chest wall deformity should arouse clinical suspicion to the diagnosis of primary hyperthyroidism. The most common signs at this age are
hypercalcaemia
, increased alkaline phosphatase, low TRPP and radiological changes especially in the hip. Radio-immunological assay of PTH and plasma concentrations of
Vitamin D
metabolites are important diagnostic aids but the interpretation of these results should take the clinical and familial context into consideration. Rapid bone structural changes, the resistance of the
hypercalcaemia
to usual therapeutic measures and the progression to rickets justify urgent surgical treatment. Nearly all cases are due to clear cell hyperplasia.
...
PMID:[Congenital hyperparathyroidism. 3 cases]. 381 73
Vitamin D
metabolites were measured on admission in eight patients intoxicated with ergocalciferol (serum calcium 3.01-4.05 mmol/l) and also during the subsequent 2 months in six of the eight. Serum concentrations of 25-hydroxyergocalciferol, on admission, were grossly elevated in all patients (range 583-1843 nmol/l). Serum calcium concentration was related significantly only to the concentration of 25-hydroxyergocalciferol (P = 0.003). Concentrations of 25-hydroxyergocalciferol in serum were significantly related to those of calciferol (P = 0.004). Elevated initial concentrations of 1,25-dihydroxycalciferol, mainly as 1,25-dihydroxyergocalciferol, were found in seven of the eight patients (range 179-313 pmol/l). It is suggested that the
hypercalcaemia
in these patients may be explained by the action of 25-hydroxyergocalciferol at high concentration in competing for 1,25-dihydroxycalciferol receptors, thus exerting a biological effect per se, and also by increasing the synthesis of 1,25-dihydroxycalciferol through a mass-action effect on the renal 1 alpha-hydroxylase.
...
PMID:Vitamin D metabolism in patients intoxicated with ergocalciferol. 387 80
Dialysis osteomalacia is characterized by distinctive, although not pathognomonic, clinical and biochemical features. Symptoms and signs may include musculoskeletal pain, arthralgias, proximal muscle weakness, and spontaneous fractures. Biochemical characteristics may be
hypercalcemia
and normal serum alkaline phosphatase activities.
Vitamin D
administration may induce early severe
hypercalcemia
. Plasma phosphate and immunoreactive parathyroid hormone concentrations may be at any level. Only bone histology allows to establish the diagnosis of dialysis osteomalacia with certainty. Diphosphonate bone scan, however, enables to distinguish between severe osteitis fibrosa and dialysis osteomalacia. The diagnostic value of desferrioxamine administration with subsequent measurement of plasma aluminium remains to be determined. The complex interactions existing between parathyroid hormone and aluminium are not yet fully understood.
...
PMID:Dialysis osteomalacia: clinical aspects and physiopathological mechanisms. 391 57
Hypercalcemia
associated with disseminated histoplasmosis in an elderly male is described. Serum calcium levels increased during vitamin D supplementation, supporting the proposed mechanism of
hypercalcemia
in granulomatous diseases. Rapid clinical deterioration and death occurred shortly after administration of steroids for relative adrenal insufficiency.
Vitamin D
and calcium supplements may aggravate the
hypercalcemia
of granulomatous disease and should be avoided.
...
PMID:Hypercalcemia in disseminated histoplasmosis. Aggravation by vitamin D. 399 69
Animal-experimental examinations show that the peroral or intramuscular application of a high dose of vitamin D2 or of D3 leads to a toxic effect of these compounds on the osteocytes and that the
hypercalcaemia
evoked by this is mainly to be traced back to an increased deliberation of calcium from the bones. After application of a larger dose of vitamin D the activation mechanism in the liver and in the kidneys is much inhibited for several weeks so that no formation of 1,25-hydroxy-vitamin-D takes place; consequently, no furthering effect on the mineralisation of the bones is performed. Therefore, it is recommended to use physiological doses in the prevention of rachitis (500-1,000 IU a day). During the pregnancy the activity of the enzymes which participate in the activation of the D-vitamins increases in the liver and the kidneys. The kidneys of the fetuses are able to form 1,25-hydroxy-vitamin-D.
Vitamin D
and 25-hydroxy-vitamin-D transgress through the placenta into the fetuses. Due to the adaptation mentioned and the increased formation of 1,25-hydroxy-vitamin-D the absorption of calcium and phosphate increases during pregnancy. Recent pathobiochemical knowledge concerning the metabolism of the D-vitamins in several diseases are described.
...
PMID:[New findings on the metabolism and importance of the D vitamins, with special reference to the use of vitamin D]. 628 25
Vitamin D
intoxication was induced in chicks by treatment with large amounts of radioactive cholecalciferol (vitamin D3) either by s.c. injections or by stomach tube.
Hypercalcemia
and nephrocalcinosis were present, confirming toxicity. The distribution of cholecalciferol and its metabolites in the tissues of the intoxicated birds was compared with that in birds that were treated with physiological amounts of radioactive cholecalciferol. Treatment with pharmacological doses resulted in marked elevation of cholecalciferol and its metabolites in all tissues examined, including elevation of 1 alpha,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol in the intestine. The predominant form of cholecalciferol in these birds was found to be the unchanged vitamin, whereas in birds treated with physiological doses 25-hydroxycholecalciferol was the predominant metabolite. The route of vitamin administration was found to be of importance only when pharmacological doses were given: generally, higher levels were noted when administered via s.c. injections than via stomach tube, except in the arteries. It is suggested that in vitamin D intoxication, the factor responsible for the pathological changes in soft tissues is cholecalciferol itself. High levels of 1 alpha,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol may be responsible for the
hypercalcemia
.
...
PMID:Metabolism of cholecalciferol in vitamin D intoxicated chicks. 628 28
Serum vitamin D metabolites, the renal tubular maximum reabsorptive rate for phosphate (TMP/GFR) nephrogenic cyclic AMP (NcAMPI, and CaE (urinary calcium excretion per litre of glomerular filtrate) were measured in 14 adults with familial hypocalciuric
hypercalcaemia
(FHH). The findings were compared with analyses in 14 patients with surgically proven primary hyperparathyroidism matched for serum calcium, creatinine clearance and vitamin D status (assessed by serum concentrations of 25 hydroxyvitamin D).
Vitamin D
metabolites were also measured in 16 normocalcaemic relatives of patients with FHH. The serum concentration of 24,25 dihydroxycholecalciferol was appropriate for the prevailing 25 hydroxyvitamin D and no difference was found between groups. The serum concentration of 1,25 dihydroxycholecalciferol was significantly greater in primary hyperparathyroidism (P less than 0.0005) compared with patients with FHH and their normocalcaemic relatives. TMP/GFR was reduced in both primary hyperparathyroidism (0.53 +/- 0.12 mmol/l GF, mean +/- SEM) and FHH (0.86 +/- 0.14 mmol/l GF). Patients with primary hyperparathyroidism showed an increase in NcAMP output in the urine (38.5 +/- 16 mmol/l GF) which was significantly greater (P less than 0.0001) than the normal NcAMP (13.5 +/- 9.2 nmol/l GF) found in FHH. CaE was low in FHH indicating increased renal tubular reabsorption of calcium. It is concluded that there is no abnormality of vitamin D metabolism in FHH comparable with the changes observed in primary hyperparathyroidism. It is suggested that the biochemical abnormalities in FHH cannot be explained solely upon an increased sensitivity of the renal tubules to the effects of endogenous parathyroid hormone.
...
PMID:Familial hypocalciuric hypercalcaemia: observations on vitamin D metabolism and parathyroid function. 631 24
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