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Query: UMLS:C0020438 (
hypercalciuria
)
2,502
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypercalcaemia and
hypercalciuria
are common complications of advanced mammary cancer. Of 127 patients with the disease 63 (49.5%) had some abnormality of calcium balance. Eighteen (14%) of these patients developed severe progressive hypercalcaemia and became acutely ill.Most patients had skeletal
metastases
, and the usual cause of hypercalcaemia was rapid destruction of bone by the cancer. One patient with severe uncontrollable hypercalcaemia and minimal skeletal involvement probably developed the complication due to inappropriate secretion of a parathyroid-hormone-like substance by massive hepatic deposits.Severe hypercalcaemia was controlled successfully in 13 of the 18 patients, the serum calcium levels returning to normal and the acute symptoms disappearing. Unfortunately, successful correction of the hypercalcaemia rarely was followed by prolonged survival from the underlying malignant disease. The incidence of subsequent objective response to pituitary ablation was less than usual, and only three patients survived for more than one year after the episode of hypercalcaemia.
...
PMID:Hypercalcaemia in patients with advanced mammary cancer. 557 56
Ten women with skeletal
metastases
from breast carcinoma received dichloromethylene diphosphonate (Cl2MDP), an inhibitor of osteoclast function, in a placebo-controlled, double-blind, crossover study. Eight of these patients had either hypercalcemia or
hypercalciuria
, and all 10 had elevated urinary hydroxyproline levels as evidence of active skeletal disease. Eight patients had moderate to severe bone pain. After eight weeks of oral dichloromethylene diphosphonate treatment (3,200 mg per day), either preceded by or followed by an eight-week placebo period, seven of eight patients with
hypercalciuria
had significant reductions in urinary calcium levels, and nine of 10 had reductions in urinary hydroxyproline levels (significant in eight) when the dichloromethylene diphosphonate treatment periods were compared with prestudy or placebo periods. Additionally, seven of eight subjects had decreased pain with dichloromethylene diphosphonate. There were no adverse effects other than transient diarrhea in some patients. We conclude that oral dichloromethylene diphosphonate can significantly inhibit osteoclast-mediated bone destruction in patients with bone metastases from breast cancer.
...
PMID:Effects of dichloromethylene diphosphonate in women with breast carcinoma metastatic to the skeleton. 621 77
Hypercalcemia,
hypercalciuria
, and hyperphosphaturia were present in female dogs with adenocarcinomas derived from apocrine glands of the anal sac (CA). Remission of hypercalcemia accompanied tumor excision in all six dogs undergoing surgery, whereas tumor recurrence or growth of
metastases
was associated with a return of hypercalcemia. Preoperatively, the plasma concentrations of immunoreactive parathyroid hormone in all dogs were undetectable or in the low normal range. Plasma concentrations of 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-prostaglandin E2 (PGE2M) and serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D were not significantly different from control dogs. Urinary cyclic AMP and hydroxyproline were increased in dogs with CA. No immunoreactive parathyroid hormone was detected in extracts from tumor tissue, and parathyroid glands from dogs with CA had ultrastructural characteristics of secretory inactivity. Lumbar vertebrae from hypercalcemic dogs had decreased trabecular bone volume and increased osteoclastic bone resorption compared with age-matched control dogs. After tumor excision, serum total calcium returned to the normal range, whereas immunoreactive parathyroid hormone increased 2- to 20-fold and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D decreased 2- to 8-fold. Postoperative hypocalcemia was not observed. These results indicate that CA produces a hypercalcemic factor other than immunoreactive parathyroid hormone or prostaglandin E2 that increases osteoclastic osteolysis distant from the tumor and results in hypercalcemia,
hypercalciuria
, and hyperphosphaturia.
...
PMID:Hypercalcemia in dogs with adenocarcinoma derived from apocrine glands of the anal sac. Biochemical and histomorphometric investigations. 630 May 51
Squamous carcinomas are the most common cause of humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy (HHM) in humans. To develop an animal model of this syndrome, CD-1 female mice were painted with dimethylbenzanthracene, which produced cutaneous squamous carcinomas in the majority of those painted. Greater than 90% of tumor-bearing mice developed a syndrome of hypercalcemia, hypophosphatemia,
hypercalciuria
, elevated plasma 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, normal immunoreactive PTH, elevated urinary cAMP, and accelerated bone resorption compared to control mice. Tumor excision reversed the hypercalcemia and hypophosphatemia, and autopsies revealed no evidence of skeletal or other
metastases
. Dietary calcium restriction did not affect the hypercalcemia in tumor-bearing mice. Extracts of tumor tissue contained potent bioactivity paralleling that of bovine (b) PTH in a PTH-sensitive canine renal cortical adenylate cyclase assay. The activity was trypsin sensitive and partially inhibitable by Nle, Tyr bPTH amide. The activity coeluted with chymotrypsinogen (mol wt, 25,700) on Sephacryl S-200 chromatography, well ahead of bPTH. This is the first description of an animal squamous carcinoma that produces HHM. With the exception of elevated plasma 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D levels, the syndrome precisely mimics that seen in human HHM. The presence of a biologically active protein larger than PTH in tumor extracts, similar to that extracted from human tumors, suggests a common mode of pathogenesis. This model should be useful in further studying the pathophysiology of HHM.
...
PMID:Squamous carcinoma model of humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy. 649 73
We report the case of a 46-year-old male patient who, after disease-free intervals of five, four and one and a half years following resection of an 'atypical' parathyroid adenoma in 1982, relapsed with clinical and laboratory recurrence of primary hyperparathyroidism (PHP). Noninvasive, traditional and modern imaging methods localized small distinct metastatic foci in both lungs without evidence of primary thyroid, neck or mediastinal tumor. Three successive bilateral lung nodule excisions resulted in a long PHP remission, while a three month treatment with normal saline infusions, diuretics, calcitonine and pamidronate infusions, following the last recurrence, resulted in moderate improvement of hypercalcemia and
hypercalciuria
with no effect on both PTH secretion or on the size of new metastatic lung foci. Recurrent mPCa with or without secretion of biologically active PTH is optimally treatable with successive surgical resections of the
metastases
and intermittent medical treatment to achieve PTH secreting tumor mass reduction and a beneficial metabolic effect.
...
PMID:Metastatic parathyroid carcinoma (mPCa): natural history and treatment of a case. 950 19
Brown tumors are rare skeletal manifestations of hyperparathyroidism (HPT) that may mimic cancer
metastases
. Histopathologically, they are difficult to differentiate from other giant cell lesions. A case is presented of 41-year-old woman with giant cell tumor in parieto-occipital region with injury of external bone lamina, growing into the skull cavity. The mass was suspected of being neoplastic. Numerous osteolytic lesions in the skull skeleton and multifocal bone injuries were observed, also. Elevation in calcium (5.91 mEq/L) and parathormone (1188 ng/mL) concentrations and
hypercalciuria
(52 mEq/24 h) suggested the diagnosis of HPT initially manifesting as a brown tumor of the skull. Further exploration confirmed the existence of parathyroid adenoma as a cause of the disease. The key treatment for the condition was surgical excision of the adenoma followed by the normalization of parathyroid function and significant reduction in size of skull tumor and other lesions.
...
PMID:Parathyroid adenoma diagnosed on the basis of a giant cell tumor of parieto-occipital region and multifocal bone injuries. 2446 10
A 24-year-old female patient with parathyroid carcinoma, the rarest endocrine malignancy, had two pregnancies. In the first pregnancy, she had severe nausea and fatigue. Hypercalcemia and hyperparathyroidism were diagnosed in the postpartum period. Hyperemesis gravidarum masked a diagnosis of hypercalcemia. Neck ultrasound and Tc-99m sestamibi found an enlarged lower right parathyroid gland. The gland was surgically removed, and an initial pathology report described atypical adenoma. Shortly afterward, she became pregnant again. During the second pregnancy, her calcium level was frequently controlled but was always in the normal range. Normocalcemia is explained by the specific physiology of pregnancy accompanied by hemodilution, hypoalbuminemia and maternal
hypercalciuria
(mediated by increased glomerular filtration). During lactation, calcium levels rose, and a new neck ultrasound showed a solitary mass in the area of prior surgery and an enlarged pretracheal lymph node. Fine needle aspiration of the solitary mass and node showed parathyroid carcinoma cells. The tumor mass was resected en bloc with the contiguous tissues and surrounding lymph nodes (pathology report; parathyroid carcinoma with
metastases
). Over the next five years, four consecutive surgeries were performed to remove malignant parathyroid tissue, lymph nodes and local
metastases
. Following the surgical procedures, no hypocalcemia was observed. More serious hypercalcemia recurred; the calcium level was difficult to control with a combination of pamidronate, cinacalcet and loop diuretic. No elements of multiple endocrine neoplasia were present.
...
PMID:Parathyroid carcinoma in pregnancy. 2486 16