Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020438 (hypercalciuria)
2,502 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An 8-year-old boy presented with precocious puberty and hypertension. He had hypokalemia, increased serum aldosterone and testosterone levels and low plasma renin activity. An adrenal adenoma was found using imaging methods and was removed. Postoperatively aldosterone, testosterone and blood pressure returned to normal. Renal ultrasonography findings were consistent with nephrocalcinosis, which might be explained by long lasting hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis and hypercalciuria. Precocious pseudopuberty progressed into true puberty due to the maturational effect of testosterone. Nephrocalcinosis was still present 8 years later and hypertension was recurring obviously as a consequence of increased peripheral resistance.
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PMID:Aldosterone and testosterone producing adrenal adenoma in childhood. 775 88

Typical manifestations of hyperaldosteronism include salt retention, hypokalemia, and metabolic alkalosis. However, a consequence infrequently recognized and described is hypocitraturia. In combination with hypercalciuria, aldosterone-induced hypocitraturia can trigger calcium nephrolithiasis. The authors report a case of an individual with primary hyperaldosteronism from an adrenal adenoma that resulted in hypocitraturia. The patient had severe recurrent renal calcium calculi that corrected with adrenalectomy. The clinical physiology of renal calcium and citrate handling in hyperaldosteronism is reviewed.
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PMID:Recurrent calcium nephrolithiasis associated with primary aldosteronism. 1521 56

The negative effect on bone due to the glucocorticoid excess is mediated by the direct action of cortisol in reducing bone apposition and increasing bone resorption, and by indirect mechanisms such as the calcium malabsorption, hypercalciuria and hypogonadism. The condition of overt hypercortisolism, also called Cushing's syndrome, leads to osteoporosis and fractures in up to the 70% of cases, even in the presence of normal gonadal status and in males. The recovery from Cushing's syndrome leads to a normalization of bone mineral density only after several years, even if some data show that the risk of fractures normalizes after one year from the cure. Alendronate has been demonstrated to be useful to accelerate the restoration of normal bone mass after the cure of Cushing's syndrome Several studies, even not all, have been demonstrated that also the condition of asymptomatic or "subclinical" hypercortisolism (often associated to adrenal adenoma) is associated to a reduction of bone mineral density and increased prevalence of fracture even in the presence of eugonadal status and in males. Unfortunately, data regarding the effect of the normalization of cortisol secretion on bone mass and risk of fractures are lacking. On the other hand, it is known that osteoporotic fractures may be the clinical presentation of an otherwise asymptomatic hypercortisolism. In a recent study we have demonstrated that in a population of outpatients with established osteoporosis and without known or clinically evident secondary causes, the prevalence of subclinical hypercortisolism is about 10%. This finding suggests that the presence of subclinical hypercortisolism has to be taken in to account when evaluating patients with unexplainable established osteoporosis.
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PMID:[Role of cortisol hypersecretion in the pathogenesis of osteoporosis]. 1871 63