Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A series of 36 patients with surgically proved
primary hyperparathyroidism
is reported. From this group a clinical profile consisting of
obesity
, anxiety, and/or depression in a mildly hypertensive, middleaged female was derived. Women constituted 92 percent of the patients. The serum calcium was confirmed again as the single most valuable test in the evaluation of this disorder.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism in the primary care setting. 99 52
Seventy-seven calcium balance and 47Ca turnover studies were performed in normal volunteers (n = 15) and in patients with osteoporosis (n = 12),
primary hyperparathyroidism
(n = 8), osteogenesis imperfecta (n = 5), medullary carcinoma of the thyroid (n = 4), thyrotoxicosis (n = 2) and intestinal bypass for
obesity
(n = 11). After intravenous injection of 20 microCi of 47Ca two retention curves of 47Ca were obtained: R1(t) directly measured on a whole-body counter and R2(t) calculated from the cumulated daily excretions of 47Ca in urine and faeces. The data were fitted to a modification of the continuously expanding exchangeable calcium pool model. Dermal calcium loss was estimated from the serum 47Ca specific radioactivity curve and the constantly increasing difference between the two retention curves. The median dermal calcium loss in 77 studies was 1.50 mmol 24 h-1 1.73 m-2 (range 0.13-4.60). The dermal calcium loss might be overestimated by redistribution of tracer or by eventual insufficient collection of urine and faeces. The possible influences of these errors have been evaluated. Patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
had a greater (P less than 0.02) dermal calcium loss (2.64 mmol; range 0.80-4.50) than a control group (1.38 mmol; range 1.25-2.34).
...
PMID:Calcium metabolism evaluated by 47Ca kinetics: estimation of dermal calcium loss. 641 10
A 48-year-old woman underwent jejunoileal bypass surgery for
obesity
while hypercalcemic. Three years later, she developed symptomatic osteomalacia impairing her daily activities. Bone biopsy confirmed the clinical diagnosis of osteomalacia, and treatment with 8000 U daily of vitamin D and milk resulted in striking improvement of clinical symptoms and resolution of her osteomalacia both chemically and histologically. The patient, however, again became hypercalcemic and a parathyroid adenoma was subsequently removed with restoration of serum calcium values to normal. Neither the occurrence and successful treatment of gross symptomatic osteomalacia consequent to jejunoileal bypass surgery, nor the obscuration of
primary hyperparathyroidism
by osteomalacia has been hitherto well documented in the United States.
...
PMID:Symptomatic osteomalacia after jejunoileal bypass surgery in a patient with primary hyperparathyroidism. A study of the change in bone morphology and vitamin D metabolites before and during treatment. 660 88
In a university-affiliated community hospital, medical records of 58 patients on whom the intact parathyroid hormone immunoassay (I-PTH) and 29 patients on whom both the carboxyl terminal PTH(C-PTH) and I-PTH ordered by physicians were reviewed to determine the reasons for requesting these tests. Reasons for ordering the PTH tests include (1) the evaluation of hypercalcemic patients (25/58 I-PTH); (2) the evaluation of hypocalcemic patients (2/58 I-PTH); (3) to rule out
primary hyperparathyroidism
in normocalcemic stone formers (4/58 I-PTH, 4/29 C-PTH) and in those with abnormal skeletal x-ray (3/48 I-PTH 1/29 C-PTH); (4) to follow patients with chronic renal failure on dialysis (11/58 I-PTH, 9/29 C-PTH); (5) to rule out ectopic hyperparathyroidism in patients with cancer (2/58 I-PTH, 3/29 C-PTH); (6) to satisfy physicians' intellectual curiosity of patients with diabetes mellitus (3/58 I-PTH, 3/29 C-PTH) and
obesity
(5/58 I-PTH; 6/29 C-PTH); (7) to evaluate acute renal failure (1/29 C-PTH). In 3/58 patients on whom I-PTH tests were ordered, reason(s) could not be determined. The C-PTH was elevated in 9/9 patients with chronic renal failure, 4/6 obese patients, 2/3 patients with cancer, 1/3 diabetic patients, 1/4 stone formers, 2/2 patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
. Patients with chronic renal failure had the highest C-PTH. Based on well established indications for ordering the PTH immunoassays, 25 out of 58 (43%) of I-PTH and 9 out of 29 (31%) of C-PTH ordered are inappropriate.
...
PMID:Diagnostic utility of carboxyl-terminal and intact parathyroid hormone immunoassays in hospitalized patients. 709 Oct 50
In the past, jejuno-ileal (JI) bypass operations were performed for the treatment of massive intractable
obesity
. This procedure is known to be complicated by numerous malabsorptive syndromes, occasionally resulting in electrolyte abnormalities and oxalate renal calculi. Recurring renal stones and oxalate nephropathy are cause to reverse the JI bypass. However, investigation of recurring renal stones should be done to exclude causes that are not secondary to the bypass procedure itself. We present a patient 13 years post JI bypass with recurring renal calculi due to
primary hyperparathyroidism
.
...
PMID:A Jejuno-ileal Bypass Patient Presenting with Recurrent Renal Stones due to Primary Hyperparathyroidism. 1076 84
Dermatologists may commonly see skin lesions that reflect an underlying endocrine disorder. Identifying the endocrinopathy is very important, so that patients can receive corrective rather than symptomatic treatment. Skin diseases with underlying endocrine pathology include: thyrotoxicosis; hypothyroidism; Cushing syndrome; Addison disease; acromegaly; hyperandrogenism; hypopituitarism;
primary hyperparathyroidism
; hypoparathyroidism; pseudohypoparathyroidism and manifestations of diabetes mellitus. Thyrotoxicosis may lead to multiple cutaneous manifestations, including hair loss, pretibial myxedema, onycholysis and acropachy. In patients with hypothyroidism, there is hair loss, the skin is cold and pale, with myxedematous changes, mainly in the hands and in the periorbital region. The striking features of Cushing syndrome are centripetal
obesity
, moon facies, buffalo hump, supraclavicular fat pads, and abdominal striae. In Addison disease, the skin is hyperpigmented, mostly on the face, neck and back of the hands. Virtually all patients with acromegaly have acral and soft tissue overgrowth, with characteristic findings, like macrognathia and enlarged hands and feet. The skin is thickened, and facial features are coarser. Conditions leading to hyperandrogenism in females present as acne, hirsutism and signs of virilization (temporal balding, clitoromegaly).A prominent feature of hypopituitarism is a pallor of the skin with a yellowish tinge. The skin is also thinner, resulting in fine wrinkling around the eyes and mouth, making the patient look older.
Primary hyperparathyroidism
is rarely associated with pruritus and chronic urticaria. In hypoparathyroidism, the skin is dry, scaly and puffy. Nails become brittle and hair is coarse and sparse. Pseudohypoparathyroidism may have a special somatic phenotype known as Albright osteodystrophy. This consists of short stature, short neck, brachydactyly and subcutaneous calcifications. Some of the cutaneous manifestations of diabetes mellitus include necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum, diabetic dermopathy, scleredema adultorum and acanthosis nigricans.
...
PMID:Cutaneous manifestations of endocrine disorders: a guide for dermatologists. 1268 37
Patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
(PHPT) have an increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Elevated serum calcium and/or PTH may directly contribute to vascular tissue damage, but the role of classic factors for atherosclerosis has not fully been evaluated in this disease. The aim of our study was to dissect the potential effect of hypercalcemia and/or high PTH from that of major cardiovascular risk factors (i.e. diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, hypertension,
obesity
, smoking habit) on the carotid artery structure of patients with PHPT. Twenty-six consecutive patients with PHPT [subdivided into two groups according to the absence (n = 10) or the presence (n = 16) of one or more risk factors] and 15 normocalcemic healthy subjects as controls were studied. At ultrasonography, a significant increase (P < 0.001) of carotid mean and maximum intima-media thickness, as well as a significant reduction of lumen diameter (P < 0.05) were found in the PHPT group with risk factors, compared with the other two groups. This suggests that hypercalcemia and/or PTH elevation per se are not determinant of carotid atherosclerosis in PHPT, and that increased cardiovascular mortality and morbility in this disease is attributable to the combined presence of classic cardiovascular risk factors.
...
PMID:Ultrasound evaluation of carotid artery in primary hyperparathyroidism. 1272 60
The United States Preventive Services Task Force has provided an evidence-based guideline indicating that bone mineral density (BMD) testing is appropriate for all women aged 65 or older. This does not preclude BMD testing in younger postmenopausal women but places the onus on the treating physician to justify the procedure to the patient and often the patient's insurance carrier. There are very few circumstances in which BMD testing is appropriate for healthy premenopausal women, but BMD testing in younger postmenopausal women is often appropriate: when there is a family history of osteoporosis with fracture, a personal history of fracture as an adult, and a medical, surgical or therapeutic history that might be associated with accelerated bone loss or increased risk of fracture. Medical conditions include intestinal diseases associated with malabsorption, such as non-tropical sprue, or
primary hyperparathyroidism
. Women who have neurologic conditions that increase the risk of falling should also be tested. There are data to suggest that patients with hemoglobinopathy are at increased risk for osteoporosis. Surgical conditions include the increasingly performed surgery for
obesity
and other surgery resulting in bowel resection (e.g., for inflammatory bowel disease). The major medication-related concern is corticosteroid therapy, but chronic or over-treatment with thyroxine, and chronic heparin therapy, should also be considered risk factors for osteoporosis. When performing a BMD test for the first time, it is essential to remember that 50% of women at menopause will have a negative T-score, but this does not imply that the patient has indeed lost any bone from her peak bone mass.
...
PMID:Is BMD testing appropriate for all menopausal women? 1633 12
Patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
(PHPT) have impaired vasodilation both dependent and independent of endothelium. The aims of our study were to measure three different biochemical markers of endothelial activation, i. e., plasma thrombomodulin, soluble(s) E-selectin, and von Willebrand factor, in PHPT patients before and one year after successful parathyroidectomy, and to distinguish the potential effect of hypercalcemia and/or high parathyroid hormone from that of major cardiovascular risk factors (diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, hypertension,
obesity
, smoking habit) on endothelial function. Twenty consecutive patients with PHPT subdivided into two groups according to the absence (n = 8) or presence (n = 12) of one or more risk factors, and fifteen healthy normocalcemic subjects were studied. Baseline thrombomodulin levels were similar in the groups with and without risk factors, and in controls. In contrast, sE-selectin and von Willebrand factor were higher in PHPT patients with risk factors than in those without risk factors (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively) and controls (p < 0.01). Neither thrombomodulin nor sE-selectin changed after parathyroidectomy in either PHPT group. Plasma von Willebrand factor decreased (p < 0.01) in patients without risk factors, while persisting at high levels in patients with risk factors. In conclusion, in spite of a limitation due to the small number of patients, our study suggests that classic cardiovascular risk factors seem to be the main determinants for the high plasma levels of sE-selectin and vWF in PHPT. Together with unaltered thrombomodulin and sE-selectin levels, a plasma vWF decrease after parathyroidectomy might reflect a specific mechanism of its endothelial calcium- and/or PTH-stimulated secretion in some PHPT patients without risk factors. Whether a vWF reduction after parathyroidectomy may be used as a biochemical index for improved endothelial function in PHPT patients without risk factors has yet to be demonstrated in larger studies.
...
PMID:Biochemical markers of endothelial activation in primary hyperparathyroidism. 1652 14
Helicobacter pylori (H pylori) infection is a leading world-wide infectious disease as it affects more than half of the world population and causes chronic gastritis, peptic ulcer disease and gastric malignancies. The infection elicits a chronic cellular inflammatory response in the gastric mucosa. However, the effects of this local inflammation may not be confined solely to the digestive tract but may spread to involve extra-intestinal tissues and/or organs. Indeed, H pylori infection has been epidemiologically linked to extra-digestive conditions and diseases. In this context, it has been speculated that H pylori infection may be responsible for various endocrine disorders, such as autoimmune thyroid diseases, diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia,
obesity
, osteoporosis and
primary hyperparathyroidism
. This is a review of the relationship between H pylori infection and these endocrine disorders.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori infection and endocrine disorders: is there a link? 1952 19
1
2
Next >>