Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032617 (polyuria)
3,056 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Parathyroid carcinoma accounts for 0.5 to 5% of all cases of hyperparathyroidism. We reviewed the clinical, surgical, and pathologic features observed in all patients with parathyroid carcinoma evaluated at the Mayo Clinic from 1920 through 1991. Forty-three patients (22 women, 21 men; mean age, 54 yrs, range 29-72) were identified, including 2 with familial hyperparathyroidism. Information on initial presentation was available in 40 patients: 15 (38%) presented with polydipsia or polyuria, 11 (27%) with myalgias or arthralgias, 7 (17%) with weight loss, and 4 (10%) with nephrolithiasis; 3 patients (7%) were asymptomatic at presentation. Of 31 patients in whom the initial neck examination was recorded, 14 (45%) had a palpable neck mass. The mean serum calcium and serum phosphorus levels were 14.6 mg/dl and 2.3 mg/dl, respectively. Parathyroid hormone levels were elevated in 21 of 21 patients (mean elevation, 10.2 times upper limit of normal). Complications included nephrolithiasis in 14 of 25 patients (56%), bone disease in 20 of 22 patients (91%) and both in 8 of 15 patients (53%). All patients underwent primary surgical resection of parathyroid carcinoma. Twenty-six of 43 patients (60%) required a second operation with 18 patients requiring multiple re-explorations. At the second operation, residual tumor was found in the neck (68%), mediastinum (16%), or both (12%). Six patients received radiation therapy to the neck (5 patients) or bones (1 patient) for recurrent or metastatic disease. Of these, 1 patient appeared cured of parathyroid carcinoma by radiation therapy 11 years after documented tumor invasion of his trachea. Repeated excision of tumor recurrences was an effective means of controlling hypercalcemia in these patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Parathyroid carcinoma: clinical and pathologic features in 43 patients. 151 93

To study dietary management of chronic renal failure (CRF), 1600 dogs older than 5 y were screened for serum urea and serum creatinine concentration. Three hundred fifty-eight dogs (22.4%) showed values above normal (6.67 mmol/L of serum urea, 88.4 mul/L of serum creatinine). Sixty of these dogs with slight or moderate clinical signs of CRF, at least polyuria, were selected for the study. Thirty-two dogs were fed a commercial canned medium protein diet (MPD) [27% protein, 0.36% phosphorus in dry matter (DM)] and 28 dogs were fed a homemade diet (HMD; 21.5% protein, 0.38% phosphorus in DM). Dogs were reevaluated for clinical status, blood chemistry profile (urea, creatinine, total protein, calcium and phosphorus) and urinalysis at 9 intervals over 28 wk. In general, palatability of both diets was high and dogs maintained their body weight. Nevertheless eight dogs of the MPD and six dogs of the HMD group died or had to be killed during the study. In surviving dogs, serum urea, creatinine, phosphorus and [P x Ca] were significantly reduced nearly to the normal range after 4 wk. A slight increase at the end of the study occurred because clients did not adhere strictly to dietary instruction after recovery of the dogs. These results suggest that elderly dogs frequently show a mild or moderate CRF, and dietary treatment with medium protein and low phosphorus diets is effective in improving blood chemistry data as well as physical condition of those dogs.
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PMID:Effects of medium protein diets in dogs with chronic renal failure. 194 Dec 10

Disorders of the urinary system are common in geriatric dogs. Common urinary disorders that are seen in older dogs include chronic renal failure, urinary incontinence, bladder tumors, and prostate problems. Therapy for chronic renal failure is aimed at both slowing the progression of the disease and ameliorating the signs of uremia. Therapeutic recommendations for the conservative medical management of chronic renal failure include reducing dietary protein, moderately reducing salt intake, maintaining normal serum phosphorus levels, providing free access to water, avoiding stress, supplementing water soluble vitamins, using anabolic steroids to treat the anemia of chronic renal failure, treating acidosis, and controlling hypocalcemia. Urinary incontinence can often be controlled or eliminated. The appropriate approach to management of this disorder is to identify and remove specific causes. Common causes of urinary incontinence are urethral incompetence, urinary tract infection, and polyuria and polydypsia. Bladder tumors are, fortunately, not a common tumor of dogs, but are more common in geriatric dogs than in the young. The most common bladder tumor is the transitional cell carcinoma. Therapy for this tumor is usually palliative because of its malignant nature and because it is usually located in the neck of the bladder. Its location in the bladder often makes it impossible to resect the tumor completely without removing the entire bladder and diverting the ureters. New chemotherapeutic modalities are being evaluated that may increase life expectancy after diagnosis and, therefore, improve prognosis. Prostate disease is also seen in older dogs. Types of prostate abnormalities seen in dogs include prostatic hyperplasia, cysts, abscesses, acute and chronic infection, and neoplasia. The institution of proper therapy requires an accurate diagnosis; neutering is often recommended as a part of therapy regardless of the type of prostatic disease present.
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PMID:Urologic disorders of the geriatric dog. 264 20

The effects of two reduced-protein diets and a canine maintenance diet on renal function, nutrition, serum and urine acid-base and electrolyte values, and divalent ion metabolism were compared in Beagle dogs with induced chronic renal failure. Two reduced-protein (18%) diets differed in their protein sources. One 18% protein diet was formulated using egg protein as the only protein source. The other 18% protein diet was formulated using a mixture of animal and vegetable proteins. The 42% protein diet contained a mixture of animal and vegetable protein sources. Results of this study indicate that the egg-based and mixed protein-based diets had similar effects on most clinical and laboratory evaluations in dogs with chronic renal failure. However, the egg protein diet appeared to promote hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis. Both reduced-protein diets were beneficial in reducing azotemia, polyuria, hypermagnesemia, and fractional excretion of phosphorus compared with the 42% protein diet.
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PMID:The importance of egg protein in reduced protein diets designed for dogs with renal failure. 322 51

Case records from 21 dogs with hypercalcemia and hyperparathyroidism were evaluated. The dogs were greater than or equal to 7 years old, and 6 were Keeshonds. The most common clinical signs were polydipsia/polyuria, listlessness, and muscle weakness. The serum calcium concentrations were 12.1 to 19.6 mg/dl. Serum phosphorus concentrations were low in 5 dogs, within the reference range in 13 dogs, and high in 3 dogs that also had high concentrations of BUN. Twenty dogs had a parathyroid adenoma, and 1 had a parathyroid carcinoma. Nineteen dogs had their parathyroid tumor surgically removed. Within 5 days of tumor removal, 11 of the 19 dogs became hypocalcemic and the remaining 8, normocalcemic. Nine of the 11 hypocalcemic dogs developed clinical signs. Iatrogenic hypercalcemia was induced in 7 of 16 dogs treated orally with calcium carbonate plus vitamin D. Only 1 of 19 dogs that had their parathyroid tumor excised died in hypocalcemic tetany. Two additional dogs died within 2 weeks of surgery, one because of pancreatitis, the other due to renal failure. Eight dogs died 9 to 37 months after surgery of unrelated problems. Eight dogs were alive for at least 7 to 28 months after surgery.
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PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism in dogs: 21 cases (1976-1986). 365 3

The mechanism of the concentrating defect of hypercalcemia is explored by examining the effect of concomitant phosphate restriction. Rats were pair fed a normal phosphorus diet, without (group 1) or with dihydrotachysterol (group 2), or a low-phosphorus diet (group 3). Hypercalcemia was comparable in groups 2 (12.1 +/- 0.6 mg/dl) and 3 (11.8 +/- 0.4 mg/dl), but serum phosphate was lower in group 3 than group 2 (3.8 +/- 0.7 vs. 7.1 +/- 1.1 mg/dl, P less than 0.005). Group 2 rats had impaired maximum urinary concentration after 24 h of fluid deprivation (2,441 +/- 450 mosmol/kg H2O, P less than 0.001) compared with group 1 (3,263 +/- 466 mosmol/kg H2O) or group 3 (3,332 +/- 515 mosmol/kg H2O) animals. Polydipsia and polyuria were found in group 2 rats only. Tubular calcium reabsorption was higher in group 2 (83.1 +/- 33.5 mg/24 h, P less than 0.001) than group 1 (47.0 +/- 26.1 mg/24 h) or group 3 (52.8 +/- 19.3 mg/24 h) animals, and medullary calcium concentration was higher in group 2 (7.57 +/- 3.08 nmol/mg dry wt, P less than 0.05) as compared to group 1 (5.04 +/- 1.37 nmol/mg dry wt) or group 3 (5.32 +/- 0.98 nmol/mg dry wt) rats. Total medullary solute concentration was significantly higher in group 3 than group 2 animals. Thus phosphate restriction prevents the defect of urinary concentrating ability of chronic hypercalcemia, probably by decreasing tubular uptake and tissue accumulation of calcium.
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PMID:Prevention of hypercalcemia-induced renal concentrating defect and tissue calcium accumulation. 376 41

A 13-year-old girl presenting with abdominal pain, polyuria, polydipsia, and radiologically confirmed renal calculi was diagnosed as having primary hyperparathyroidism. Laboratory data revealed markedly elevated serum calcium, low phosphorus, and elevated parathyroid hormone. Other parathyroid function tests also confirmed the diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism. Ultrasound examination showed a small echogenic nodule in the parathyroid gland. Following a single gland resection, the extremely high serum calcium level promptly decreased to normal range, and it has remained normal.
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PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism. Case report and management. 399 65

During initial trials of 5-azacytidine in adults with advanced acute leukemia, we unexpectedly observed acid-base, fluid, and electrolyte abnormalities that contributed directly to the deaths of two early patients. To evaluate this toxicity further, we studied 22 patients who received a total of 33 courses of combination chemotherapy that included 5-azacytidine. During 29 courses (88%) of treatment, polyuria, glucosuria, and/or transient changes in the serum concentrations of bicarbonate or phosphorus were detected. Spontaneous polyuria with demonstrable salt wasting and orthostatic hypotension occurred during seven courses (21%) of treatment. Inappropriate glucosuria was observed in nine courses (27%). In 24 courses (73%) the serum bicarbonate fell below the normal range. The urine became alkaline during 12 of these instances; the anion gap was not increased during the acidosis. Hypophosphatemia with serum phosphorus concentrations as low as 0.3 mg/dl occurred in 21 of 32 evaluable courses (66%). In the three patients studied the tubular reabsorption of phosphorus was 10%-18%. The renal abnormalities that were observed suggest both proximal and distal tubular damage from 5-azacytidine. Patients receiving 5-azacytidine should be monitored closely for manifestations of renal toxicity.
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PMID:5-Azacytidine and renal tubular dysfunction. 616 Aug 87

Very few patients with familial hypomagnesemia, hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis have been described. Information about clinical course, familial studies or evolution after renal transplantation is very scant. We have studied eight patients with this syndrome who belong to five different families. The mean age at diagnosis was 15 +/- 7 years (5 to 25 years). The primary clinical data were polyuria-polydipsia (8 cases), ocular abnormalities (5), recurrent urinary tract infections (5) and recurrent renal colics with stone passage (2). Bilateral nephrocalcinosis was observed in all cases. Every patient showed hypomagnesemia (1.1 +/- 0.2 mg/dl) with inappropriately high urinary magnesium (Mg) excretions (70 +/- 17 mg/day), Mg clearances (4.4 +/- 1.2 ml/m) and Mg fractional excretions (16.2 +/- 7.1%). Hypercalciuria was present in every case except in those with advanced renal insufficiency. Serum parathormone levels were abnormally high. Serum calcium (Ca), phosphorus and potassium, and urinary excretions of uric acid and oxalate were normal. Neither chronic oral Mg administration nor thiazide diuretics normalized serum Mg levels or urinary Ca excretions, respectively. Follow-up was 6 +/- 4.5 years. Renal function worsened in every case with six patients starting on chronic dialysis after 4.3 +/- 3.8 years. The progression rate of renal insufficiency correlated with the severity of nephrocalcinosis. Five patients have received a kidney graft, and their serum Mg and urinary Ca have always been within normal values after transplantation. Twenty-six members of four of the affected families were studied: none of them showed hypomagnesemia, renal insufficiency or nephrocalcinosis. However, eleven cases (42%) had hypercalciuria and four of them presented with recurrent renal stones. Two family members had medullary sponge kidneys. In conclusion, progression to renal insufficiency is common in this syndrome; oral Mg and thiazide diuretics are ineffective to correct abnormalities. After kidney graft, tubular handling of Mg and Ca was normal. A striking incidence (42%) of hypercalciuria was found in the familial study.
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PMID:Familial hypomagnesemia with hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis. 763 71

An 11-year-old castrated male mixed breed dog was referred for evaluation of muscle twitching, polyuria, polydipsia, anorexia, and periocular alopecia. Primary hypoparathyroidism was diagnosed by documenting decreased serum concentrations of parathyroid hormone and ionized calcium. Neurological, gastrointestinal, and dermatological signs resolved after calcium repletion. Initially, 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol PO was required to correct the hypocalcemia. Dihydrotachysterol, in combination with oral calcium supplementation, was used for long-term maintenance of normal serum calcium concentration. Aminoaciduria, glucosuria, and hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis were consistent with a diagnosis of Fanconi's syndrome. This diagnosis was further supported by the presence of hypokalemia and increased urinary fractional excretion of sodium, potassium, calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium. Renal tubular dysfunction resolved after oral supplementation with calcium and vitamin D3. Fanconi's syndrome in this dog may have been caused by decreased serum concentration of 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol, which was secondary to decreased parathyroid hormone production.
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PMID:Fanconi's syndrome in a dog with primary hypoparathyroidism. 783 12


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