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Query: UMLS:C0020438 (
hypercalciuria
)
2,502
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
J Exp Clin Cancer Res 1997
Dec
PMID:Metastatic parathyroid carcinoma (mPCa): natural history and treatment of a case. 950 19
This report concerns an 11-year-old boy who manifested hypophosphatemic rickets associated with congenital microvillous atrophy (CMA). He had been suffering from vomiting and severe diarrhea from the first day of life and had been treated with total parenteral nutrition (TPN) since he was 67 days old. At 4 years of age, intestinal biopsy resulted in a diagnosis of CMA. He was admitted to our hospital complaining of leg pain at the age of 11. Laboratory data revealed hypophosphatemia, elevated serum 1, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25(OH)2D) levels, and
hypercalciuria
. A roentgenogram showed rickets in the extremities. A balance study of phosphate in urine and stool indicated that the amount of phosphate leaking into the stool was greater than that into the urine. Moreover, the total amount of phosphate leaking from both the intestine and kidney exceeded the amount of phosphate intake from TPN. The rickets was healed by increasing the phosphate concentration in TPN. This case is different from X-linked hypophosphatemic rickets but similar to hereditary hypophosphatemic rickets with
hypercalciuria
(HHRH) in terms of
hypercalciuria
and elevated serum 1,25(OH)2D levels. The effectiveness of phosphate treatments used here is also similar to that used for HHRH. However, this type of hypophosphatemic rickets is unique in that phosphate leaking into the intestine plays an important role in its pathogenesis.
J Bone Miner Res 1998
Dec
PMID:Hypophosphatemic rickets accompanying congenital microvillous atrophy. 984 14
Sarcoidosis is a multisystemic disorder of unknown etiology that most commonly affects adults between 20 and 40 years of age. Patients with sarcoidosis frequently present with bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy and pulmonary infiltration, and often with ocular and skin lesions. The diagnosis is established when clinical and radiographic findings are supported by histologic evidence of non-caseating epithelioid cell granulomas found on tissue biopsy. Diagnosis of sarcoidosis requires exclusion of other causes of granuloma formation. Sarcoidosis is also characterized by distinctive laboratory abnormalities, including hyperglobulinemia, an elevated serum angiotensin converting enzyme level, evidence of depressed cellular immunity manifested by cutaneous anergy and, occasionally, hypercalcemia and
hypercalciuria
. Glucocorticoids remain the mainstay of therapy when treatment is required, although other anti-inflammatory agents are being used increasingly often.
Am Fam Physician 1998
Dec
PMID:Sarcoidosis: a primary care review. 1049 6
This review describes the supposed mechanisms leading to idiopathic
hypercalciuria
(IHU) in childhood, further the diagnostic criteria and the proposed treatment modalities are discussed. IHU is not only one of the main causes of renal stone disease in children but it's also at the origin of the postglomerular haematuria and the frequency-dysuria syndrome. Its role in the development of osteoporosis in adults is also documented. The diagnosis of raised calcium excretion is based on age specific values during early infancy. In older children and adults a urinary calcium/creatinine ratio exceeding 0.6 mmol/mmol is regarded as elevated. Dietary calcium restriction can no longer be recommended for the treatment of IHU because it results in secondary hyperoxaluria and on the long-term causes decreased bone mineral density. Patients should be kept on dietary sodium restriction and high fluid intake. In cases IHU associated with recurrent episodes of macroscopic haematuria or recurrent stone disease a therapeutic trial with hydrochlorothiazide in the dose of 0.5-1 mg/kg/day with potassium-citrate supplementation and possibly magnesium citrate should be started. In some special forms of
hypercalciuria
such as the X-linked recessive nephrolithiasis syndrome or Bartter syndrome the localization and in some cases even the molecular mechanism of the events leading to increased calcium excretion are elucidated. In IHU enhanced Ca(++)-ATPase, and Na-Li countertransport activity and decreased Na+/K+ ATPase activity were described in the erythrocyte membrane model. It is expected that with the molecular genetic development the clinical classification of the hypercalciuric syndromes will become a rational genome-based one.
Orv Hetil 1998
Dec
06
PMID:[Idiopathic hypercalciuria in childhood]. 987
Osteoporosis is increasingly recognised in men. Low bone mass, risk factors for falling and factors causing fractures in women are likely to cause fractures in men. Bone mass is largely genetically determined, but environmental factors also contribute. Greater muscle strength and physical activity are associated with higher bone mass, while radial bone loss is greater in cigarette smokers or those with a moderate alcohol intake. Sex hormones have important effects on bone physiology. In men, there is no abrupt cessation of testicular function or 'andropause' comparable with the menopause in women; however, both total and free testosterone levels decline with age. A common secondary cause of osteoporosis in men is hypogonadism. There is increasing evidence that estrogens are important in skeletal maintenance in men as well as women. Peripheral aromatisation of androgens to estrogens occurs and osteoblast-like cells can aromatise androgens into estrogens. Human models exist for the effects of estrogens on the male skeleton. In men aged > 65 years, there is a positive association between bone mineral density (BMD) and greater serum estradiol levels at all skeletal sites and a negative association between BMD and testosterone at some sites. It is crucial to exclude pathological causes of osteoporosis, because 30 to 60% of men with vertebral fractures have another illness contributing to bone disease. Glucocorticoid excess (predominantly exogenous) is common. Gastrointestinal disease predisposes patients to bone disease as a result of intestinal malabsorption of calcium and colecalciferol (vitamin D).
Hypercalciuria
and nephrolithiasis, anticonvulsant drug use, thyrotoxicosis, immobilisation, liver and renal disease, multiple myeloma and systemic mastocytosis have all been associated with osteoporosis in men. It is possible that low-dose estrogen therapy or specific estrogen receptor-modulating drugs might increase BMD in men as well as in women. In the future, parathyroid hormone peptides may be an effective treatment for osteoporosis, particularly in patients in whom other treatments, such as bisphosphonates, have failed. Men with idiopathic osteoporosis have low circulating insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1; somatomedin-1) concentrations, and IGF-1 administration to these men increases bone formation markers more than resorption markers. Studies of changes in BMD with IGF-1 treatment in osteoporotic men and women are underway. Osteoporosis in men will become an increasing worldwide public health problem over the next 20 years, so it is vital that safe and effective therapies for this disabling condition become available. Effective public health measures also need to be established and targeted to men at risk of developing the disease.
Drugs Aging 1998
Dec
PMID:Osteoporosis in men. New insights into aetiology, pathogenesis, prevention and management. 988 98
The human calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) is a 1078-amino-acid cell surface protein which is expressed in the parathyroids, thyroid cells and the kidney, and is a member of the family of G protein-coupled receptors. The CaSR allows regulation of parathyroid hormone (PTH) secretion and renal tubular calcium reabsorption in response to alterations in extracellular calcium concentrations. The human CaSR gene is located on chromosome 3q13.3-q21, and loss of function CaSR mutations have been reported in the hypercalcaemic disorders of familial benign (hypocalciuric) hypercalcaemia (FBH or FHH) and neonatal severe primary hyperparathyroidism (NSHPT). In addition, gain of function CaSR mutations have been observed in a novel familial syndrome of hypocalcaemia with
hypercalciuria
. The human CaSR gene on chromosome 3q13.3-q21 is likely to be one of several, as two other loci for FBH have been located on chromosome 19p and 19q13. Cloning and characterisation of these genes will help to further elucidate the mechanisms regulating extracellular calcium.
Biochim Biophys Acta 1998
Dec
10
PMID:Disorders of the calcium-sensing receptor. 992 Apr 7
We report three boys with adrenal hypoplasia congenita (AHC) and additional findings that represent a new syndrome, IMAGe: Intrauterine growth retardation, Metaphyseal dysplasia, AHC, and Genital anomalies. Each presented shortly after birth with growth retardation and severe adrenal insufficiency. Each of the three patients had mild dysmorphic features, bilateral cryptorchidism, a small penis, and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. Skeletal surveys revealed metaphyseal dysplasia in all three and epiphyseal dysplasia in two. The patients had documented or suspected
hypercalciuria
and/or hypercalcemia, resulting in nephrocalcinosis in one and in prenatal liver and spleen calcifications in another. AHC presents most often either as an isolated abnormality, caused by mutations in the DAX1 gene, or as part of an Xp21 contiguous gene syndrome, caused by a deletion of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy, glycerol kinase, and DAX1 genes. All three patients with the IMAGe association had normal creatine kinase levels and no evidence of glycerol kinase deficiency. Sequence analysis of DNA from these patients revealed no mutation in the DAX1- or steroidogenic factor-1-coding sequences, nor was a deletion of DAX1 detected. Identification of the molecular basis of the IMAGe association will give new insight into the pathogenesis of this syndromic relationship involving bone, adrenal cortical, and pituitary development.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1999
Dec
PMID:IMAGe, a new clinical association of intrauterine growth retardation, metaphyseal dysplasia, adrenal hypoplasia congenita, and genital anomalies. 1059 84
Bartter syndromes are defined as a family of inherited recessive autosomal tubulopathies. They are characterized by hypochloremia, hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis associated with potassium renal leakage and normal blood pressure despite increased plasma renin activity. Three forms of the disease are identified as followed: 1) Gitelman syndrome or hypocalciuria hypomagnesemia syndrome is a mild form often discovered in childhood or teenagers in reason of tetany. It is an homogeneous disorder related to mutations of the genes encoding the thiazide-sensitive Na-Cl cotransporter located in the distal convoluted tubule. 2) Antenatal Bartter syndrome with
hypercalciuria
and nephrocalcinosis or hyperprostaglandin E syndrome is a severe form, often revealed by hydramnios, prematurity and growth delay. It is related to mutations of two types of genes encoding for transporters of Henle's loop: the bumetanide-sensitive cotransporter Na-K-2Cl (NKCC2) [type I] or the inwardly-rectifying potassium channel (ROMK) [type II]. 3) the classical form or type III Bartter syndrome, often revealed by dehydration in the first year of life, is associated with hypomagnesemia in 20% of cases and normal or increased calciuria. This form is related to mutations of CLCNKB gene encoding for a chloride channel in Henle's loop. This classification, in part related to the demonstration of mutations in the genes encoding for tubular chloride or potassium channels, does not fit all cases, overlapping syndromes are frequent. Moreover some endocrinological (diabetes) and neurological (deafness) abnormalities are sometimes associated with Bartter syndromes. Both phenotypic and genetic approach must help to the diagnosis of these tubulopathies.
Ann Endocrinol (Paris) 1999
Dec
PMID:[Bartter's syndromes]. 1061
The calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) is a G-protein-coupled receptor that is widely expressed, has tissue-specific functions, and regulates cell growth. Activating mutations of this receptor cause autosomal dominant hypocalcemia, a syndrome characterized by hypocalcemia and
hypercalciuria
. The identification of a family with an activating mutation of the CaR (Thr151Met) in which hypocalcemia cosegregates with several unusual neoplasms led us to examine the transforming effects of this mutant receptor. Transfection of NIH/3T3 cells with the mutant but not the normal receptor supported colony formation in soft agar at subphysiologic calcium concentrations. The mutant CaR causes a calcium-dependent activation of the extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK) 1/2 and Jun-N-terminal kinase/stress-activated (JNK/ SAPK) pathways, but not P38 MAP kinase. These findings contribute to a growing body of information suggesting that this receptor plays a role in the regulation of cellular proliferation, and that aberrant activation of the mutant receptor in this family may play a role in the unusual neoplastic manifestations.
Neoplasia 1999
Dec
PMID:Calcium-induced activation of a mutant G-protein-coupled receptor causes in vitro transformation of NIH/3T3 cells. 1093 95
Nephrolithiasis (kidney stones) affects 5-10% of adults and is most commonly associated with
hypercalciuria
, which may be due to monogenic renal tubular disorders. One such hypercalciuric disorder is Dent's disease, which is characterized by renal proximal tubular defects that include low molecular weight proteinuria, aminoaciduria and glycosuria, together with rickets in some patients. Dent's disease is due to inactivating mutations of the renal-specific voltage-gated chloride channel, CLC-5, which is expressed in the proximal tubule, thick ascending limb and collecting duct. The subcellular localization of CLC-5 to the proximal tubular endosomes has suggested a role in endocytosis, and to facilitate in vivo investigations of CLC-5 in Dent's disease we generated mice lacking CLC-5 by targeted gene disruption. CLC-5-deficient mice developed renal tubular defects which included low molecular weight (<70 kDa) proteinuria, generalized aminoaciduria that was more pronounced for neutral and polar amino acids, and glycosuria. They also developed
hypercalciuria
and renal calcium deposits and some had deformities of the spine. Furthermore, endocytosis as assessed by horseradish peroxidase uptake in the proximal tubule was severely impaired in CLC-5-deficient mice, thereby demonstrating a role for CLC-5 in endosomal uptake of low molecular weight proteins. Thus, CLC-5-deficient mice provide a model for Dent's disease and this will help in elucidating the function of this chloride channel in endocytosis and renal calcium homeostasis.
Hum Mol Genet 2000
Dec
12
PMID:Mice lacking renal chloride channel, CLC-5, are a model for Dent's disease, a nephrolithiasis disorder associated with defective receptor-mediated endocytosis. 1111 37
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