Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Back pain is one of the chief complaints of the elderly. It may be either a chronic deep skeletal muscular pain or an acute circumscribed pain arising from nerve-root irritation. The main causes of back pain in older people are: 1) degenerative changes (spondylosis, osteoarthritis, ankylosing hyperostosis); 2) malignancy (multiple myeloma, metastases from carcinoma or lymphoma); and 3) metabolic disorders (osteoporosis, osteomalacia, chondrocalcinosis, Paget's disease). Mechanisms and variations are discussed in detail.
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PMID:Back pain: osteoarthritis. 13 24

In patient bearing an advenced prostatic carcinoma with bony metastases, a major hypophosphoremia had led to the detection of an osteomalacia. As far as we know, three observations of the same syndrome have been published previously. As a pathogenic hypothesis, we propose that this tumor secret a substance which inhibit the action of vitamine D. Hypophosphoremia could result from an hyperparathyroid due to hypocalcemia.
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PMID:[Dense bone metastases and hypophosphatemic osteomalacia during the course of prostatic cancer (author's transl)]. 23 49

The presence of eight "metabolic features" was assessed on the bone scintigrams of ten patients with osteomalacia. In all of these bone images, sufficient features were present to strongly suggest a metabolic disorder. There scintiphotos were included in a controlled blind study using 30 normal bone scans and 20 scans of metastatic disease. Nine of the ten metabolic bone images were correctly identified by two independent observers. Skeletal uptake of radiotracer, expressed as bone-to-soft tissue ratio, was significantly higher in the osteomalacic patients than in a group of 80 controls.
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PMID:The role of bone scanning in osteomalacia. 63

A case of hypophosphataemic osteomalacia occurring in association with a carcinoma of prostate is described. Although only palliative treatment to the primary tumour was possible, worthwhile remission of bone symptoms, due to osteomalacia, was achieved with pharmacological doses of vitamin D. The presence of extensive skeletal metastases modified the radiological features of osteomalacia. Major alterations in the distribution of calcium within the skeleton were observed during a period when total body calcium remained unaltered. This observation may be of relevance to other cases in which osteosclerotic metastases develop.
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PMID:Osteomalacia and carcinoma of prostate with major redistribution of skeletal calcium. 108 99

Pelvic x-rays taken as a routine in 150 patients in a geriatric hospital revealed a considerable number of pathological conditions, many of which were unexpected. These included pathollgical fractures of the pelvic bones and femoral necks, calcification of the walls of the iliac and femoral vessels, calcified fibroids of the uterus, urinary stones, arthritis of the hip joints, metastases, osteomalacia, Paget's disease of pelvic bones and lumbar vertebrae, and degenerative arthritic chcnages in the lumbar spine. Routine x-ray of the pelvis is indicated in elderly patients admitted to geriatric hospitals.
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PMID:A survey of pelvic x-rays in the elderly. 114 84

The study was carried out to evaluate the clinical validity and usefulness of serum tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) activity determined using an improved spectrophotometric assay. Enzyme activity was measured in 84 normal subjects and in 109 patients with common metabolic bone diseases. Mean values of serum TRAP activity in male subjects (n = 19; 10.4 +/- 2.15 U l-1) were not significantly different from those found in female subjects (n = 65; 10.8 +/- 1.8 U l-1). In the latter group mean values were significantly raised in post-menopausal subjects (10.5 +/- 2.0 U l-1; p less than 0.01) compared with mean values in pre-menopausal women (8.45 +/- 1.8 U l-1). We found a significant inverse correlation between serum TRAP activity values and bone mineral density (BMD) measured both at an ultradistal radial point (n = 33, r = -0.506; p less than 0.01), and at the lumbar spine (n = 57, r = -0.261; p less than 0.05). Mean serum TRAP activity values in patients with metabolic bone diseases were: primary hyperparathyroidism, n = 30: 14.2 +/- 4.89 U l-1, p less than 0.001 vs normal subjects; chronic maintenance haemodialysis, n = 19: 17.4 +/- 6.7, p less than 0.001; metastatic cancer, n = 13: 21.2 +/- 6.3, p less than 0.001; post-surgical hypoparathyroidism, n = 10: 9.9 +/- 1.8, NS; involutional osteoporosis, n = 20: 12.5 +/- 2.3 p less than 0.001; Paget's disease, n = 10: 16.8 +/- 3.5, p less than 0.001; osteomalacia, n = 7: 19.5 +/- 3.31, p less than 0.001.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Clinical usefulness of serum tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase activity determination to evaluate bone turnover. 176 45

Alkaline phosphatase, osteocalcin and hydroxyproline levels were evaluated in patients with the following conditions: primary hyperparathyroidism, renal dialysis, hyperthyroidism, Cushing's syndrome, long term corticosteroid therapy, Paget's disease, osteoblastic metastases, osteolytic or mixed metastases, and nutritional osteomalacia. In all cases the levels of the three substances were increased, with the following exceptions: a) in endogenous or exogenous hypercortisolism states osteocalcin level was reduced and those of alkaline phosphatase and hydroxyproline were unchanged; and b) in blastic or lytic metastases osteocalcin level was unchanged. In general, alkaline phosphatase and hydroxyproline levels had a higher sensitivity than those of osteocalcin in structural bone disease (Paget's disease, blastic or lytic metastases), whereas the converse was true for endocrine bone disease (the remaining conditions except osteomalacia, which is mixed, both structural and endocrine; in this syndrome, the three substances showed the same sensitivity.
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PMID:[Different behavior of bone turnover markers in endocrine (extrinsic) and structural (intrinsic) osteopathies]. 234 91

Various tumoral diseases may induce hypophosphataemic osteomalacia. This is the case, in particular, with mesenchymal tumours and sclerosing metastases of prostatic cancer; much less common causes are diffuse connective tissue dysplasias and non-prostatic epitheliomas. Depending on whether osteomalacia results from a mesenchymal tumour or from osteitis of prostatic origin, the practical problems encountered are quite different. In the first case, the important point is not to miss a mesenchymal tumour when confronted with an acquired and apparently idiopathic hypophosphataemia; repeated examinations at regular intervals are sometimes necessary to detect the tumour which is usually benign; osteomalacia can then be cured by its removal. In the second case, the difficulty is to detect an osteomalacia which may be masked by bone metastases and to recognize its tubular origin in order to prescribe the appropriate treatment. Little is known about the pathogenesis of tumoral hypophosphataemic osteomalacia. The renal diabetes and low 1,25 (OH)2 D plasma levels frequently associated with the disease reflect a complex enzymatic disorder thought to be caused by a humoral mediator secreted by the tumour. Studies carried out in this field have already shown that 1,25 (OH)2 D is therapeutically useful when the tumour cannot be excised.
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PMID:[Tumoral hypophosphoremic osteomalacia]. 293 49

Bone pains observed in patients undergoing estrogen therapy, and presenting with osteoblastic metastases from prostatic cancer are usually related to unsuccessful treatment. In some patients, these pains may result from osteomalacia--ie incomplete mineralization of the new bone--because of the drainage of calcium by the osteoblastic metastases. A clinical, biological and histomorphometric study of bone specimens without decalcification was conducted in ten patients with osteoblastic disease secondary to prostatic carcinoma, who were under estrogen therapy, and for whom a change of therapy was contemplated. The study reports three cases of osteomalacia. Their bone pains were more intense, more diffuse and more permanent than those registered by patients without osteomalacia. All three had had previous fractures of the neck of the femur and a low urinary and serum calcium and phosphorus content. The discovery of osteomalacia by histomorphometric study is important because it allows effective, etiological treatment of the bone pains in these patients.
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PMID:[Prostatic osteocondensing metastases. The value of examining for osteomalacia]. 404 Jul 29

A case of osteomalacia with multiple asymmetrically distributed pseudofractures (Looser's zones) simulating metastases is presented. Radiographic correlation is essential to increase specificity and avoid misinterpretation.
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PMID:Osteomalacia. An imposter of osseous metastasis. 407 70


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