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Query: UMLS:C0026764 (
multiple myeloma
)
36,148
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An assessment of free and total calcium measurements was made in 691 patients with suspected hypercalcemia or disorders often associated with hypercalcemia. In 18.9% of the 1049 specimens analyzed from nine different patient groups, a different impression of hypercalcemia was obtained depending on whether the free or total calcium was considered. Analysis of the ratio of free to total calcium indicated that there are two main factors which influence the distribution of calcium in the serum of hypercalcemic patients: the concentrations of albumin and parathyroid hormone. A lowered albumin concentration accounted for the altered distribution of calcium in patients with malignancies and partially accounted for the altered distribution in patients postrenal transplantation. In patients with confirmed primary hyperparathyroidism a higher ratio of free to total calcium was found, which could not be explained by alterations in protein, albumin, pH, or CO2 content but was related to parathyroid hormone concentration. Free calcium appears to be a slightly better indicator of elevated calcium states than total calcium. Measurements of free calcium should be particularly useful in patients with altered albumin concentration, with
multiple myeloma
in whom a calcium-binding protein could be present, after renal transplantation, and with suspected
hyperparathyroidism
and normal or slightly elevated total calcium values.
...
PMID:Relationship of free and total calcium in hypercalcemic conditions. 42 92
Plasma calcium was measured routinely as a part of profile screening of patients admitted to a geriatric department. Pathological hypercalcaemia was found in 1.33% of those screened, the cause being bone metastases (29%),
hyperparathyroidism
(21%), bronchial carcinoma without bone metastasis (18.5%), lymphosarcoma without bone metastasis (8%) and
multiple myeloma
(2.5%). There remained a further group of patients with hypercalcaemia and renal failure (21%) in whom diagnosis was often obscure. Where renal function was normal, discriminant analysis showed that the four main diagnostic groups were biochemically distinguishable. Discriminant analysis thus seems likely to be of practical value in the differential diagnosis of hypercalcaemia in elderly patients with normal renal function, but requires prospective validation.
...
PMID:Hypercalcaemia in elderly hospital in-patients: value of discriminant analysis in differential diagnosis. 57 68
In case when the diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism is unclear or difficult to establish the authors recommend to use the method of bone biopsy. The histological picture of the bone in
hyperparathyroidism
is described. It has been found that the bone biopsy ensures the differenciation of
hyperparathyroidism
from other forms of osteodistrophies, esteodisplasies and
myeloma
.
...
PMID:[Bone biopsy in the diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism]. 67 91
In two patients with extensive pulmonary tuberculosis who developed hypercalcaemia and hypokalaemia the hypercalcaemia appeared related to the use of small doses of vitamin D, which suggested patients with tuberculosis were hypersensitive to vitamin D. They were thus similar to patients with sarcoidosis, and it is interesting that the Kveim test result was positive in both cases. The hypercalcaemia was quickly suppressed with steroids.
Hyperparathyroidism
, thyrotoxicosis, Addison's disease, and
multiple myeloma
were excluded on clinical grounds and by the appropriate tests. The hypokalaemia was associated with increased renal excretion of potassium, and was probably due to distal tubular damage from hypercalcaemia.
...
PMID:Hypercalcaemia and hypokalaemia in tuberculosis. 69 98
Obviously, the relentless decrease in bone mass that accompanies aging will continue the long sought "elixir of youth" is discovered. Individuals, because of race, sex, environmental, dietary, genetic or activity differences, will be more or less predisposed to symptomatic osteoporosis with increasing age. The careful and knowledgeable physician should, however, make every attempt to rule out potentially remediable, subtle forms of demineralizing disorders, such as apathetic or T3-thyrotoxicosis,
hyperparathyroidism
, malabsorption and osteomalacia or
multiple myeloma
. Not only do these diseases result in an accelerated loss of bone mass and an increased incidence of skeletal fractures but they mimic postmenopausal or senile osteoporosis radiologically. Once the metabolic or malignant disorders of bone metabolism have been effectively considered and ruled out, the senescent or postmenopausal osteoporotic patient should be treated judiciously with short-term estrogen therapy, a diet sufficient in vitamin D and calcium content and continued attempts to insure adequate skeletal mobilization. The addition of sodium fluoride and/or calcitonin to this regimen should not be attempted without extreme caution until the potentially harmful systemic effects of prolonged therapeutic trials have been appropriately assessed.
...
PMID:Senile and postmenopausal osteoporosis. 76 91
Primary amyloidosis is an interesting clinical entity in which amyloid is deposited in various organs, particularly mesodermderived tissues such as heart, skeletal muscle, skin, connective tissue and bone. A case with multiple lytic bone lesions is presented. Comparison to previous similar cases is made with attention being directed to the typical distribution of lesions about large joints with associated soft-tissue prominence and increase in the articular space. The differentiating radiologic features are compared to those of rheumatoid arthritis,
hyperparathyroidism
, and lytic metastatic lesions, with particular attention being given to the osteolytic lesions of plasmacytomas associated with
multiple myeloma
.
...
PMID:Bone and joint involvement in primary amyloidosis. 115 55
A variety of tumors and nontumorous lesions were used to illustrate some of the biologic, clinical, and pathologic aspects of inappropriate or ectopic endocrine and metabolic syndromes that have musculoskeletal repercussions. It is clear, both from the discussion and case material, that many mechanisms of ectopic endocrine syndromes have yet to be clarified. Elaborate techniques are available for hormonal estimations, but their routine use is prohibitively expensive and relatively unrewarding. Cells of a given lesion may be functionally heterogeneous or may fail to elaborate active products in substantial amounts. Different cells may produce similar peptides, while the same cells can produce more than one. Despite these difficulties, recognition of ectopic endocrine syndromes remains crucial to diagnosis and patient management, and thus corroboration or correlation must often rest on a cruder basis. In fact, the clinical significance of basic laboratory data, e.g., PTH elevation, may vary, as PTH may be immunoreactive but biologically inactive. As another example, hypercalcemia associated with
myeloma
may be variously related to coexistent
hyperparathyroidism
, renal disease, dehydration, or humoral osteolysis. Therefore, roentgenographic evidence of bone destruction or skeletal stigmata of
hyperparathyroidism
imbues laboratory data with greater significance. Paraneoplastic syndromes are of particular concern to the radiologist, as multiple systemic manifestations, occurring either synchronously or metachronously, may suggest the presence of an underlying or unifying lesion or even of a specific type of neoplasm. They may precede detection of neoplasms by months to years and can develop at any time during their course. Paraneoplastic syndromes may, furthermore, parallel the course of a lesion and be used as indicators of remission or recurrence. Conversely, those unassociated with overt symptoms possess endocrine markers that can reinforce sometimes silent skeletal stigmata. Familiarity with representative secretory products influencing the musculoskeletal system per se may often clarify seemingly innocuous and sometimes asymptomatic skeletal findings. Alert imagers may, therefore, detect, infer, or suspect particular syndromes when they present in a specific sequence or mosaic. Conversely, when apprised of their existence, imagers should know where their related effects may be sought or anticipated. Such relationships, sometimes serendipitously discovered, may be valuable assets in clinical diagnosis and patient management in both suspected and unsuspected cases.
...
PMID:Skeletal manifestations of ectopic or inappropriate endocrine and metabolic syndromes. 198 23
A study of clinical renal and endocrinologic status was undertaken to determine whether the lowest maximal bone mass observed in premenopausal women, aged 20-40 years, was a result of undiagnosed disease or represented a continuum of measurement in young adult women. A clinical sample (n = 53) was generated from an epidemiologic cross-sectional study (n = 535) designed to characterized correlates of maximal bone mass. Cases were 28 premenopausal women whose femoral bone mass as in the lowest 5th percentile of the distribution, less than 0.75 g/cm2 at the femoral neck. Controls were 25 randomly selected premenopausal women whose femoral bone mass was within 1 SD of the mean of the femoral bone mass distribution. There was no indication of increased frequency of disease among the cases as compared with the controls. No occult hypogonadism, thyrotoxicosis,
hyperparathyroidism
,
myeloma
, or renal insufficiency was observed to explain lower bone mass measurement. However, cases had significantly lower estradiol levels (75 versus 106 pg/ml, P less than 0.05) and higher luteinizing hormone levels (3.8 versus 3.1 mIU/ml, P less than 0.07) than controls. Though preliminary, these findings suggest that lower estradiol levels may contribute to significant differences in bone mass even among healthy women at the time of maximal bone accumulation.
...
PMID:Health and hormonal characteristics of premenopausal women with lower bone mass. 222 87
It has been assumed, but not documented, that hypercalcemia induces an appreciable reduction in the serum anion gap (AG) because it represents an increase in the level of unmeasured cations. To test this question, we retrospectively compared the data of 59 hypercalcemic patients with malignancy [group 1, serum Ca 13.3 +/- SE 0.3 mg/dl] with those of 108 patients whose hypercalcemia was of parathyroid origin (group 2, serum Ca 12.1 +/- 0.1 mg/dl), and those of 51 control subjects (group 3, serum Ca 9.5 +/- 0.1 mg/dl). The AG of group 2 subjects (8.7 +/- 0.3 mEq/l) was significantly lower than that of the other two groups (p less than 0.001 for both) despite their higher serum albumin and lower serum Ca in comparison to group 1. The AGs of group 1 (11.1 +/- 0.4 mEq/l) and group 3 (11.1 +/- 0.3 mEq/l) were identical. There was no statistically significant correlation between the AG and serum Ca in the hypercalcemic patients. The major finding that the association of hypercalcemia with reduced AG is seen in
hyperparathyroidism
, but not in malignancy-related hypercalcemia, is not explained by differences in serum albumin, renal function, or acid-base status. Overlap of values between groups limits the diagnostic usefulness of the AG in an individual patient. Nevertheless, in the absence of
multiple myeloma
, the finding of an AG of 5 mEq/l or less in a hypercalcemic patient may be a helpful clue suggesting that malignancy is not the etiology.
...
PMID:Effect of hypercalcemia on the anion gap. 236 30
A patient with hypercalcemia and newly diagnosed
multiple myeloma
developed acute pancreatitis. Other etiologic factors for pancreatitis were excluded. Hypercalcemia secondary to
hyperparathyroidism
is associated with acute pancreatitis. In English literature, only one other case has been published where the hypercalcemia of
multiple myeloma
may have caused pancreatitis. Pancreatitis should be considered in patients with hypercalcemia and
multiple myeloma
who develop nausea/vomiting, and abdominal pain.
...
PMID:Acute pancreatitis in a case of multiple myeloma with hypercalcemia. 248 50
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