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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (
hypercalcemia
)
10,293
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We evaluated the effects of chronic massive elevations of serum GH and PRL on calcium metabolism in rats bearing the MStT/W15 and 7315a transplantable pituitary tumors. MStT/W15 tumor rats manifest elevated serum GH and PRL levels,
hypercalcemia
, hypercalciuria, and elevated serum levels of PTH and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D. The
hypercalcemia
was not reversed by dexamethasone or propranolol treatment, but was ameliorated by starvation. Parathyroidectomy produced hypocalcemia in the MStT/W15 tumor rats, confirming the parathyroid dependence of the
hypercalcemia
. The 7315a tumor produced a milder degree of
hypercalcemia
, along with elevated serum levels of PRL,
ACTH
, and corticosterone; serum GH was normal. In high concentrations, PRL and/or GH may stimulate the secretion of PTH as well as enhance dietary calcium absorption, in part through the mediation of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D.
...
PMID:Hypercalcemia in rats bearing growth hormone- and prolactin-secreting transplantable pituitary tumors. 402 91
Hypercalcaemia
due to malignant disease, in the absence of bone metastases, is generally regarded as a rare event. It occurred in 16% of a series of cases of bronchial carcinoma coming to necropsy.
Hypercalcaemia
is a relatively common complication of bronchial carcinoma. The
hypercalcaemia
is usually accompanied by hypophosphataemia and, in this respect, must be distinguished from the
hypercalcaemia
that may be found with breast carcinoma. It is frequently accompanied by hypokalaemic alkalosis; this must not be confused with the metabolic disorder that results from the production of ectopic ;
ACTH
'. The bones sometimes show changes of osteitis fibrosa akin to those seen in hyperparathyroidism. Cystic disease of bone recognizable radiologically is rare, probably because of the relatively short duration of the metabolic disturbance. The parathyroids are usually mildly atrophic. There is no evidence that the main pathogenetic mechanism is stimulation of the parathyroids by the tumour. Acceptable instances of parathyroid hyperplasia are very rare: the significance of these exceptional cases awaits further study.Squamous carcinoma of the bronchus is the type mainly incriminated. Oat-cell carcinoma and bronchial adenocarcinoma are involved less frequently than expected by chance. The significance of the tumour types implicated is discussed in relation to the possible pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Bronchial carcinoma and hypercalcaemia. 536 47
A study is reported of the estimation of plasma chloride concentration and acid-base status in the differentiation of primary hyperparathyroidism from all other causes of
hypercalcaemia
. In the two groups of patients studied, all of whom had
hypercalcaemia
, there was complete separation between the two groups on the basis of plasma chloride concentration and acid-base status. In 16 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism the increase in plasma chloride concentration and associated metabolic acidosis could have been accounted for by the known renal tubular effects of parathyroid hormone. In 13 patients with
hypercalcaemia
due to various other causes the decrease in plasma chloride concentration and associated metabolic alkalosis could be accounted for either by the known effects of an excess of calcium-ion on the renal tubules, or perhaps by suppression of endogenous parathyroid hormone secretion. In patients with
hypercalcaemia
and hypophosphataemia of ;pseudohyperparathyroidism' associated with non-endocrine tumours it is postulated that the low plasma chloride concentrations and metabolic alkalosis found in these patients were due either to a differing biological activity of the parathyroid-hormone-like polypeptide secreted by the tumour cells, or possibly to simultaneous secretion by these cells of an
ACTH
-like polypeptide.
...
PMID:Value of plasma chloride concentration and acid-base status in the differential diagnosis of hyperparathyroidism from other causes of hypercalcaemia. 557 36
The authors investigated the effect of calcium on the basal cortisol secretion and on the adrenocortical secretory reserve, the indicator of which is the so-called
ACTH
stimulation test. They revealed that during acute
hypercalcaemia
there is a significant increase of the basal cortisol secretion. The adrenocortical secretory reserve is significantly reduced during
hypercalcaemia
, this being manifested by a smaller rise of cortisolaemia after
ACTH
. The Synacthen test repeated after a 48-hour interval is fully reproducible under normocalcaemia. The basal values and the response to Synacthen do not differ from the control examination. The stimulatory action of calcium can be explained indirectly via other humoral factors, the production of which is enhanced by calcium but also the function of calcium which acts as the so-called "second messenger" in steroidogenesis. Calcium has, however, probably also a direct corticotropic effect, resembling that of
ACTH
.
...
PMID:Effect of calcium on adrenocortical secretion. 626 68
Clinical and laboratory data, histologic, electron microscopic and immunocytochemical findings of the tumors of eight patients suffering from Cushing's syndrome and of one patient with
hypercalcemia
are described. The unlabeled antibody enzyme method was used for the detection of insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, pancreatic polypeptide, corticotropin, beta-lipotropin, calcitonin, parathyroid hormone, and gastrin. Ectopic Cushing's syndrome was caused by pancreatic endocrine tumors, medullary thyroid carcinoma, a bronchial, a gastric and a thymic carcinoid, and a carcinoid of the mediastinum.
Hypercalcemia
in one patient was related to a pancreatic endocrine tumor. After surgery the clinical symptoms disappeared in two patients, but persisted or relapsed in five patients.
ACTH
-immunoreactivity could be demonstrated in six of eight tumors; calcitonin-immunoreactivity was found in the tumor of the patient suffering from
hypercalcemia
.
ACTH
-immunoreactivity could be localized to secretory granules by immunoelectron microscopy, and the presence of
ACTH
and beta-LPH in the same tumor cells could be shown in one pancreatic tumor. A combination of production of orthotopic and ectopic hormones was found in one, and secretion of two ectopic hormones was detected in another pancreatic endocrine tumor.
...
PMID:Ectopic hormone production by endocrine tumors: localization of hormones at the cellular level by immunocytochemistry. 627 90
The renin-angiotensin system was examined in Fischer rats at 7, 11 and 14 days after Leydig cell tumour transplantation, and in age matched controls. Mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), active plasma renin and serum calcium were higher (P less than 0.01) in the tumour transplant rats than in the controls at 11 days after transplantation. There was a positive correlation of both active renin and MAP with serum calcium at this time. Although inactive renin levels were elevated in the tumour transplanted rats, the ratio of inactive to active renin was decreased in comparison to controls. Plasma norepinephrine, active renin and plasma angiotensin II were higher in tumour rats at 14 days. Nevertheless, basal levels of aldosterone and MAP as well as aldosterone responses to graded infusion of angiotensin II,
ACTH
and KCl were decreased in the tumour rats at 14 days. Moderate
hypercalcaemia
(day 7 and 11), induced by Leydig cell transplantation in the Fischer rat, is associated, therefore with elevated blood pressure which appears to be related, in part, to activation of the renin-angiotensin system. However, severe
hypercalcaemia
(day 14) was associated with hypotensive hyperreninaemic hypoaldosteronism state.
...
PMID:The renin-angiotensin system in association with hyperreninaemic hypoaldosteronism in neoplasia induced hypercalcaemia. 629 44
Two 8-yr-old children, a boy and girl, are described with Cushing's syndrome secondary to ectopic
ACTH
-secreting pancreatic islet cell carcinomas. The girl, seen 28 yr ago, had strong presumptive evidence of ectopic
ACTH
production and
hypercalcemia
. The boy, studied recently, had strikingly elevated concentrations of plasma
ACTH
(1,500 pg/ml) and beta-lipotropin (beta LPH; 2,500 pg/ml) and showed no suppression of urinary 17-hydroxycorticoids or cortisol with low and high dose dexamethasone. He had increased plasma calcitonin (257 pg/ml), glucagon (442 pg/ml), lactate dehydrogenase (497 IU/liter), and alpha-fetoprotein (5,144 pg/ml). He also had hypokalemic alkalosis with elevated plasma deoxycorticosterone (70 ng/ml) and PRA (6.9 ng/ml.h) but normal plasma aldosterone (8.2 ng/dl) and 18-hydroxycorticosterone (7.6 ng/dl). Preoperative localization of the tumor was accomplished by computed tomographic scan of the abdomen with concurrent barium enema. Cell-free translation of the tumor mRNA produced authentic proopiomelanocortin of 35,000 mol wt, indicating that the
ACTH
and beta LPH were produced by the tumor from a common precursor. After removal of a large amount of metastatic tissue from the boy, clinical progression of the remaining tumor was monitored by measuring plasma
ACTH
and beta LPH. Episodic secretion of
ACTH
and beta LPH was demonstrated by taking frequent plasma samples while suppressing pituitary
ACTH
with oral dexamethasone. Chemotherapy and radiation proved ineffective in controlling the growth of his tumor.
...
PMID:Endocrine, histological, and biochemical studies of adrenocorticotropin-producing islet cell carcinoma of the pancreas in childhood with characterization of proopiomelanocortin. 630 81
The most common cause of hypoadrenocorticism in dogs is idiopathic immune-mediated destruction of the adrenal cortex. Other causes include anterior pituitary insufficiency, pituitary or adrenal neoplasia, acute withdrawal of exogenous corticosteroids, and mitotane toxicity. Females are affected more often than males; only 1 feline case has been documented. Animals 2-5 years old are most commonly affected. Clinical signs include lethargy, weakness, weight loss, anorexia, vomiting, diarrhea and bradycardia. Hematologic and biochemical changes can include eosinophilia, lymphocytosis, anemia, hyperkalemia, hyponatremia and
hypercalcemia
. Diagnosis is by finding negligible resting levels of plasma cortisol and no response to
ACTH
administration, and a serum Na:K ratio of 20:1 or less. Treatment involves restoring fluid volume, correcting acidosis, and supplementing salt and glucocorticoids. Daily oral use of prednisone at 0.05 mg/kg can safely maintain most affected dogs. Some dogs only require glucocorticoids in stressful situations. Iatrogenic secondary adrenocortical insufficiency (iatrogenic Cushing's disease) may result from a single injection of long-acting glucocorticoids or from long-term use. Clinical signs are the same as for natural hyperadrenocorticism, but endogenous cortisol release is suppressed. Treatment is gradual withdrawal of the offending glucocorticoid and elimination of the cause that initially prompted glucocorticoid therapy.
...
PMID:Diseases of the adrenal cortex of dogs and cats. 674 17
The demands of growth are known to exacerbate the effect of phosphorus deprivation (PD). We examined whether changes associated with PD could be prevented in young rats in which growth and growth hormone (GH) were eliminated by hypophysectomy (HPX) and whether PD in normal intact rats (INT) was associated with increased secretion of GH. INT or thyroxine- and
ACTH
-replaced HPX rats were fed one of the three diets: 0.31% P (NP); 0.027% P (LP), and 0.31% P, pair-fed with LP-mates (NP-PF). The results indicate that HPX did not qualitatively alter several physiologic responses to PD: (a) serum and urinary phosphorus (P) decreased and urinary calcium (Ca) increased; (b) net intestinal Ca retention fell and duodenal sac uptake of 45Ca rose; and (c) external P balance was restored and duodenal sac uptake of 32P-phosphate increased. Only the
hypercalcemia
seen in INT, LP rats was prevented by HPX. In INT rats serum immunoassayable GH levels, measured in single samples, were not different between different dietary groups while pituitary bioassayable GH was reduced in both LP and NP-PF rats when compared to the NP rats. Thus, except for
hypercalcemia
, the physiologic responses associated with PD are not prevented by the elimination of growth and GH, and the development of these responses in INT rats was not associated with a consistent or specific alteration in GH secretion.
...
PMID:Role of growth hormone in experimental phosphorus deprivation in the rat. 677 27
This study was designed to determine whether pituitary glands contain an immunoreactive material which reacts with antisera to calcitonin (CT) and, if so, whether secretion of the material could be demonstrated. Testing 15 antisera to rat and human CT and using an immunoperoxidase method, we found 2 antisera to human CT which stained rat pituitaries and several which stained human pituitaries. Essentially all cells in the rat intermediate lobe and scattered cells in the rat and human anterior lobes showed staining, and staining was not entirely abolished by prior adsorption of antisera with rat or human CT. The 2 antisera which stained rat pituitaries showed cross-reactivity with several synthetic human CT fragments (1-18, 11-23 and 22-32) but not with
ACTH
-(1-39),
ACTH
-(1-24), beta-endorphin, alpha- or beta MSH, or bovine lipotropin. Crude extracts of pituitaries from 2 strains of young rats showed CT-like immunoreactivity which could be measured easily by RIA (0.2-0.3 ng/gland). In vivo, an antiserum which stained pituitaries and 1 which did not were compared using young rats made hypercalcemic (15-20 mg/dl) with iv Ca. In rats with thyroids, both antisera showed an increase in serum CT of more than 15-fold whether the pituitary was present or absent. In thyroidectomized rats, serum CT remained undetectable (less than 50 to 100 pg/ml) during
hypercalcemia
even if the pituitary was present. In vitro, rat pituitaries in a serum-free medium did not release measurable amounts of immunoreactive CT-like material even when medium contained high Ca (2.5 mM), high K (25 mM), or TRH (10(-6) M). Therefore, the findings agree with other reports of a CT-like material in the pituitary, but no secretion of the material could be demonstrated. We hypothesize that the material is not authentic CT but is, rather a related peptide sequence probably contained in the 31 K precursor protein of
ACTH
-beta-lipotropin.
...
PMID:Calcitonin-like immunoreactivity in rat and human pituitary glands: histochemical, in vitro, and in vivo studies. 737 58
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