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Query: UMLS:C0153690 (
bone metastases
)
6,382
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Urinary adenosine -3' ,5' - cyclic monophosphate was measured in 14 patients with hypercalcaemia not caused by primary hyperparathyroidism. Increased levels were found in patients with malignant disease without
bone metastases
and believed to be examples of paraendocrine syndrome. Decreased levels were found in patients with metastatic carcinoma involving bone, and in patients with multiple myeloma, lymphoma and immobilisation after fracture. Results obtained during treatment for hypercalaemia are described in three patients. In two hypercalcaemic patients (one with hyperthyroidism and one with breast cancer with
bone metastases
) normal levels were found. This measurement is a useful substitute for assay of serum
parathyroid hormone
and is of value in the diagnosis of hypercalcaemia, in monitoring effects of treatment and in revealing underlying mechanisms.
...
PMID:Urinary cyclic AMP in diagnosis and management of hypercalcaemia: studies of patients without primary hyperparathyroidism. 16 77
Au autopsy case of cholangiocarcinoma which showed clinically hypercalcemia and hypophosphatemia without
bone metastases
is presented in this report. Although
parathyroid hormone
(
PTH
)-like substance of 520 ng/g. dry weight was measured in neoplastic tissue by the radioimmunoassay, membrane-limited secretory granules as those of parathyroid gland were not found in the fine structure. The significance of an existence of secretory granules in ectopic
PTH
producing tumor is discussed.
...
PMID:An autopsy case of cholangiocarcinoma with hypercalcemia. 21 Jun 21
Prostaglandin E concentrations were measured in a patiet with breast carcinoma, hypercalcemia, undetectable
parathyroid hormone
(
PTH
) and no evidence of
bone metastases
. Catheterization of the drainage bed of her tumor documented production of E series prostaglandins. Treatment with the largest recommended doses of indomethacin for 10 days failed to lower her plasma prostaglandin E (PGE) concentrations or to correct the hypercalcemia, but it normalized urinary excretion of PGE. Subsequent chemotherapy reduced prostaglandin concentrations toward normal values concomitant with a reduction of clinically estimated tumor burden. During this period of time, serum calcium concentrations had no consistent relationship to the plasma PGE levels. We suggest that PGE merely reflected the tumor burden of this patient and did not directly contribute to the genesis of her hypercalcemia. The pertinent literature relating PGE and hypercalcemia is reviewed.
...
PMID:Prostaglandin E and hypercalcemia in breast carcinoma: only a tumor marker? A need for perspective. 21 52
Immunoreactive
parathyroid hormone
and calcitonin in serum were measured in 34 normocalcemic patients with mammary carcinoma. The mean value of
parathyroid hormone
was significantly higher in 26 patients with
bone metastases
than in 8 patients without (p less than 0.025). One patient with
bone metastases
had slightly raised calcitonin in serum. No difference as to
parathyroid hormone
values between the groups of previously irradiated and non-irradiated patients was found. A possible explanation of the normocalcemic hyperparathyroidism is presented.
...
PMID:Parathyroid hormone and calcitonin in serum of patients with mammary carcinoma. 71 40
Nonparathyroid humoral hypercalcemia is becoming an increasingly more common problem associated with carcinoma. Carcinomas of the head and neck may elaborate parathormone or parathormone-like humors that in the absence of
bone metastases
, renal disease, parathytoid tumors, or secondary hyperparathyroidism may produce hypercalcemia, which if unrecognized, complicates and prevents the appropriate management of the patient. This report deals with the production of
parathyroid hormone
and the first reported case, to our knowledge, of carcinoma of the larynx associated with nonparathyroid hypercalcemia.
...
PMID:Production of parathyroid hormone by laryngeal cancer. Report of a case. 114 29
The effect of magnesium chloride or magnesium sulfate infusion on circulating levels of immunoreactive calcitonin (iCT) was evaluated on nine occasions in three patients with metastatic medullary carcinoma of the thyroid. One patient was normocalcemic and had normal circulating levels of immunoreactive
parathyroid hormone
(iPTH), one patient was hypocalcemic and had surgical hypoparathyroidism, and one patient had mild to moderate hypercalcemia associated with
bone metastases
. The basal serum iPTH levels were undetectable in the latter two patients. In every instance magnesium administration produced a rapid and striking fall in circulating iCT and usually a detectable fall in serum calcium. During the hypermagnesemic state, serum iPTH fell from normal to undetectable in the patient with normal parathyroid function, while serum iPTH levels remained undetectable in the hypoparathyroid patient and in the patient with hypercalcemia associated with
bone metastases
. The results of these studies indicate that: (a) contrary to what has been reported in normal experimental animals, magnesium administration lowers circulating iCT in human subjects with thyroid medullary carcinoma and (b) the calcium-lowering effect produced by magnesium in patients with medullary carcinoma may, in part at least, be due to a redistribution of body calcium that is not mediated by the actions of either
parathyroid hormone
or clacitonin.
...
PMID:Serum calcitonin-lowering effect of magnesium in patients with medullary carcinoma of the thyroid. 120 87
Breast and prostate carcinomas are the tumors most commonly associated with skeletal metastases, and the skeleton is the most common site of metastatic disease and of first distant relapse in breast cancer.
Bone metastases
are the source of considerable morbidity, including pain and functional disability, fractures, hypercalcemia, and epidural compression. The classical radionuclide bone scan remains the most effective tool for the screening of metastatic bone disease, but X-rays are more specific and remain the essential tool for the diagnosis and characterization of
bone metastases
. Computed tomography is much more useful to diagnose early metastatic involvement of bone, particularly of the spine. Patients with exclusive skeletal metastatic involvement are still frequently excluded from classical therapeutic trials because of the difficulties in the assessment of response. Recalcification of osteolytic lesions is indeed required when defining an objective response, but this criterion is insensitive and not quantitative. Moreover, the development of new osteoblastic lesions is often of difficult interpretation. A concomitant bone scan will help, but the absence of quantification of the changes and the "flare" phenomenon limit the usefulness of the technique. Pain and quality of life constitute simple, but frequently neglected, parameters of response to therapy. The clinical utility of tumor markers and of biochemical markers of bone turnover should also be more fully investigated. Neoplastic osteolysis is essentially mediated by the osteoclasts, which seem to be activated, maybe indirectly through the osteoblasts, by some tumor products. Various substances of tumoral origin have been proposed as mediators for this osteoclast activation, such as transforming growth factors, prostaglandins, and, more recently, products of the immune cells or
parathyroid hormone
-related peptide.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Metastatic bone disease: clinical and therapeutic aspects. 158 Nov 21
A region-specific radioimmunoassay has been employed to measure levels of immunoreactive parathyroid hormone-related protein(50-69) (iPTHrP(50-69)) in patients with tumour-induced hypercalcaemia (TIH). This assay is based on an antiserum raised against synthetic human PTHrP(50-69). The assay showed no cross-reactivity with human or bovine
parathyroid hormone
(1-84). The effect of a single dose (60 mg) of pamidronate was studied in 25 consecutive patients with TIH. All were rehydrated prior to treatment. All but 2 patients (8%) became normocalcaemic after treatment; both of these had very high levels of iPTHrP(50-69). Time to achieve normocalcaemia, as an index of relative resistance to pamidronate, correlated positively with pretreatment level of iPTHrP(50-69). Absence of radiological evidence of
bone metastases
also predicted relative resistance to pamidronate. In this study, iPTHrP(50-69)-induced osteoclastic bone resorption was a more important mechanism in the causation of TIH than PTHrP-induced renal reabsorption of calcium as assessed by the renal thresholds for calcium and phosphate.
...
PMID:Parathyroid hormone-related protein(50-69) and response to pamidronate therapy for tumour-induced hypercalcaemia. 178 72
The bisphosphonate clodronate has been widely used in the treatment of hypercalcaemia and osteolytic
bone metastases
. It can normalize plasma calcium in most hypercalcaemic, rehydrated cancer patients when increased bone resorption is the prevailing disturbance of calcium metabolism. When given intravenously either as a single infusion or as repeated daily administrations, serum calcium levels fall to normal 3-5 days after the onset of therapy. Long-term maintenance treatment must be adjusted individually since relapse appears to depend upon the tumour type, the degree of malignancy and any anticancer therapy. In patients in whom increased tubular calcium reabsorption is the prevailing disturbance of calcium metabolism, the effect of clodronate on plasma calcium is incomplete, despite the normalization of bone resorption. This type of therapeutic response can be reproduced experimentally in bisphosphonate-treated animals receiving a constant infusion of
parathyroid hormone
-related peptide, a peptide isolated from various tumour types including lung, kidney, breast and neuroendocrine tumour of the pancreas. In patients having a good response to clodronate, the fall in plasma calcium is accompanied by an increase in the calcium-regulating hormones,
parathyroid hormone
and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3. This homeostatic response probably explains why hypocalcaemia occurs rarely in clodronate-treated patients. No serious side-effects of treatment have been reported. Clodronate appears to be a safe and effective treatment for the hypercalcaemia of malignancy, where increased bone resorption is the major mechanism disturbing the homeostasis of extracellular calcium.
...
PMID:Treatment of hypercalcaemia of malignancy with clodronate. 183 97
Hypercalcemia is the most frequent paraneoplastic syndrome observed in cancer patients. This morbidity can be divided into two categories: one is hypercalcemia induced by severe
bone metastases
; the other the elaboration of hypercalcemic factors by solid tumors, termed humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy (HHM). With regard to humoral factors responsible for HHM, a protein with
parathyroid hormone
(
PTH
)-like activity, designated PTH-related protein (PTHrP), was isolated from a cancer cell line established from a hypercalcemic patient's lung cancer tissue, and the structure of PTHrP mRNA was identified. Since the biological activity of PTHrP explained most of the clinical and laboratory findings of HHM patients and recent clinical studies indicated the very close relationship between the development of HHM and the production of PTHrP by tumor, PTHrP is now regarded to be the primary candidate for the actual factor responsible for HHM.
...
PMID:[Malignancy-associated hypercalcemia]. 200 37
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