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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (
hypercalcemia
)
10,293
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The combination of
chronic renal failure
plus parathyroid adenocarcinoma is very rare. A 53-year-old female had been on hemodialysis for
chronic renal failure
for 7 years. For 2 years she has had bilateral knee joint pain,
hypercalcemia
and an increased parathyroid hormone level. Swelling of parathyroid gland was diagnosed and it was excised. Histological examinations of the excised right lower parathyroid gland revealed adenocarcinoma and the left lower gland showed hyperplasia.
...
PMID:Parathyroid carcinoma in a case of chronic renal failure on dialysis. 272 22
Six patients with progressive
chronic renal failure
not yet requiring dialysis and not consuming supplemental calcium or vitamin D developed
hypercalcemia
. Three had proven and 1 suspected tertiary hyperparathyroidism, 1 parathyroid carcinoma and 1 aplastic bone. None of the 3 patients who underwent bone biopsy had heavy bone aluminum staining. The patients with proven parathyroid-mediated
hypercalcemia
had marked elevation of C-terminal parathyroid hormone and alkaline phosphatase values and, when performed, radiographs consistent with osteitis fibrosa. When these findings are absent or the diagnosis is otherwise uncertain, a bone biopsy may provide a definitive diagnosis and guide management.
...
PMID:Hypercalcemia in patients with advanced chronic renal failure not yet requiring dialysis. 275 79
Calcium salts are increasingly used as phosphorus binders in patients with
chronic renal failure
. Calcium carbonate is the principal salt presently utilized, however, other calcium salts may be more effective and safer phosphorus binders. Theoretical calculations, in vitro experiments, and in vivo studies in normal subjects have shown calcium acetate to be a more effective phosphorus binder than other calcium salts. This salt has not previously been studied in patients with
chronic renal failure
. We used a one-meal gastrointestinal balance technique to measure phosphorus absorption, calcium absorption and phosphorus binding in six patients with
chronic renal failure
. Calcium acetate was compared with calcium carbonate and placebo. Equivalent doses (50 mEq Ca++) of calcium acetate bound more than twice as much phosphorus (106 +/- 23 mg) as calcium carbonate (43 +/- 39 mg) P less than 0.05. When phosphorus binding was factored for calcium absorption, calcium acetate bound 0.44 mEq HPO4 =/mEq absorbed Ca++ compared with 0.16 mEq HPO4 = bound/mEq Ca++ absorbed with calcium carbonate. More efficient phosphorus binding permits serum phosphorus concentration to be controlled with lower doses of calcium salts. The higher phosphorus binding/calcium absorption ratio coupled with a lower dose indicates that less calcium will be absorbed when calcium acetate is used for phosphorus control. Markedly positive calcium balance,
hypercalcemia
and ectopic calcification should be less likely to occur with this drug than other calcium salts.
...
PMID:Calcium acetate, an effective phosphorus binder in patients with renal failure. 281 Oct 66
The skeletal manifestations of hyperparathyroidism are due to the stimulation of osteoclast-mediated bone resorption by high circulating concentrations of parathyroid hormone (PTH). Since diphosphonates inhibit PTH-mediated bone resorption, we assessed the effects of clodronate in 42 patients with
hypercalcaemia
and increased bone resorption due to primary hyperparathyroidism (20 patients), secondary hyperparathyroidism in
chronic renal failure
(12 patients on haemodialysis replacement therapy) and tertiary hyperparathyroidism following successful renal transplantation (10 patients). Clodronate (0.8-1.6 g daily by mouth or 300 mg given as an intravenous infusion following five consecutive dialysis treatments) significantly decreased serum calcium and biochemical indices of bone resorption in the three groups studied. In primary and tertiary hyperparathyroidism, serum calcium values remained above the upper limit of the reference range despite suppression of bone resorption due to the unopposed effect of PTH on renal tubular reabsorption of calcium. Prolonged treatment (3 months) was associated with a partial recurrence of
hypercalcaemia
in 8 of 12 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism despite continued effects on bone resorption, possibly due to a secondary decrease in bone formation. These studies indicate that clodronate is capable of suppressing PTH-mediated bone resorption in disorders of parathyroid secretion and may prove to be a useful adjunct in their medical management.
...
PMID:Clodronate in the medical management of hyperparathyroidism. 296 58
We present the results obtained using a 1-84 human parathyroid hormone (PTH) assay in patients with abnormal calcium metabolism. A normal range was established in a series of healthy volunteers. Patients with surgically proven hyperparathyroidism (HPT) showed increased PTH levels which were separate from the normal range. Patients with probable hyperparathyroidism and milder
hypercalcaemia
showed a raised median PTH level but the range overlapped with normal. Patients with
hypercalcaemia
of malignancy showed reduced PTH levels and these patients were readily differentiated from those with probable and proven HPT by the use of the assay. In patients with
chronic renal failure
PTH values ranged from normal to high, the PTH concentration was found to be correlated with plasma alkaline phosphatase, but not with plasma creatinine.
...
PMID:The use of an intact molecule parathyroid hormone assay in disorders of calcium metabolism. 306 5
Two-site immunoradiometric assay for human parathyrin (PTH1-84) is specific for the intact, secreted, biologically active 84 amino peptide. This system incorporates two-different polyclonal antibodies to human intact PTH and has several technical advantages for use. This assay could detect a wide range of PTH in patients with hypo-, hyperparathyroidism,
chronic renal failure
and
hypercalcemia
with malignancy, especially distinguishing the level of human intact PTH in hypoparathyroidism from in normal.
...
PMID:[Basic studies on an immunoradiometric assay system for human parathyrin (intact PTH1-84)]. 317 64
The effects of a small dose of calcitriol (less than or equal to 0.50 micrograms/day) on parathyroid and renal function, bone histomorphometry, and aluminum (Al) metabolism were studied in a randomized double blind study of 30 patients with predialysis
chronic renal failure
. The patients were followed at least monthly for 8 months. Serum Al levels were measured, and transiliac bone biopsies, double labeled with tetracycline, were obtained at both the beginning and end of the 8-month treatment period. Serum calcium and ionized calcium concentrations increased in the treatment group, and the calcitriol dosage had to be reduced in 8 patients at least once because of
hypercalcemia
. Calcitriol treatment did not significantly influence either serum A1 levels or the presence of stainable Al in bone. Serum PTH, urinary cAMP excretion, and bone resorption indices decreased in the treatment group, indicating suppression of parathyroid hyperfunction. Throughout the study renal function decreased at a similar rate in both groups, suggesting that calcitriol treatment had no depressive effect on renal function. We conclude that a low dose of calcitriol may be used to preserve or even restore bone metabolism in patients with predialysis
chronic renal failure
if serum calcium is closely followed and
hypercalcemia
promptly treated.
...
PMID:Low dose calcitriol versus placebo in patients with predialysis chronic renal failure. 318 64
A 66 year-old man with
chronic renal failure
developed
hypercalcaemia
during acetolyte medication. A technetium-99m phosphate bone scan at this time showed extraosseous isotope uptake in the stomach, which disappeared 2 weeks later after normalisation of the serum calcium level. This phenomenon can be interpreted as transient metatastic calcification during
hypercalcaemia
.
...
PMID:[Transient extra-osseous increase of isotope activity in the bone scintigram in acetolyt-induced hypercalcemia]. 318 40
Magnesium is an important element for health and disease. Magnesium, the second most abundant intracellular cation, has been identified as a cofactor in over 300 enzymatic reactions involving energy metabolism and protein and nucleic acid synthesis. Approximately half of the total magnesium in the body is present in soft tissue, and the other half in bone. Less than 1% of the total body magnesium is present in blood. Nonetheless, the majority of our experimental information comes from determination of magnesium in serum and red blood cells. At present, we have little information about equilibrium among and state of magnesium within body pools. Magnesium is absorbed uniformly from the small intestine and the serum concentration controlled by excretion from the kidney. The clinical laboratory evaluation of magnesium status is primarily limited to the serum magnesium concentration, 24-hour urinary excretion, and percent retention following parenteral magnesium. However, results for these tests do not necessarily correlate with intracellular magnesium. Thus, there is no readily available test to determine intracellular/total body magnesium status. Magnesium deficiency may cause weakness, tremors, seizures, cardiac arrhythmias, hypokalemia, and hypocalcemia. The causes of hypomagnesemia are reduced intake (poor nutrition or IV fluids without magnesium), reduced absorption (chronic diarrhea, malabsorption, or bypass/resection of bowel), redistribution (exchange transfusion or acute pancreatitis), and increased excretion (medication, alcoholism, diabetes mellitus, renal tubular disorders,
hypercalcemia
, hyperthyroidism, aldosteronism, stress, or excessive lactation). A large segment of the U.S. population may have an inadequate intake of magnesium and may have a chronic latent magnesium deficiency that has been linked to atherosclerosis, myocardial infarction, hypertension, cancer, kidney stones, premenstrual syndrome, and psychiatric disorders. Hypermagnesemia is primarily seen in acute and
chronic renal failure
, and is treated effectively by dialysis.
...
PMID:Magnesium metabolism in health and disease. 328 51
Intact parathormone (PTH 1-84) was measured with a new immunoradiometric method in serum from 83 children and adults with various abnormalities of calcium metabolism. The results were compared with those of an assay of midregional PTH fraction (44-68). Both measurements discriminated well between normal controls and patients with primary or secondary hyperparathyroidism. In patients in
chronic renal failure
intact PTH measurement was best for demonstrating parathyroid secretion. An important advantage of the new method is in the diagnosis of PTH hyposecretion in hypoparathyroidism and of tumour
hypercalcaemia
, which is not possible by mid-regional PTH determination. Intravenous injection of calcium (2 mg/kg over 5 min) and of synthetic PTH fragment (6 U/kg 1-38 hPTH over 2 min) caused a reduction in intact serum-PTH to about half the initial value after five minutes. Measuring intact PTH is thus a suitable method for determining both raised and decreased parathyroid secretion in disease and in the course of function tests. It is simple to perform, subject to only minor interference, and thus suitable also as a routine laboratory test.
...
PMID:[Intact serum parathormone (PTH 1-84). A suitable parameter for the diagnosis of calcium metabolism disorders]. 334 39
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