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Query: UMLS:C0153690 (
bone metastases
)
6,382
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Serum bone GLA-protein, a modern and sensitive marker of bone turnover, was measured in 15 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, 18 patients with hypercalcemia of malignancy, 41 patients with bone metastasis without hypercalcemia, and 29 healthy subjects. Serum bone GLA-protein was increased in primary hyperparathyroidism (17.6 +/- 3.9 ng/ml) and normal in hypercalcemia of malignancy (5.2 +/- 2.8 ng/ml; p less than 0.001 vs hyperparathyroidism) and in normocalcemic patients with
bone metastases
. In primary hyperparathyroidism
parathyroid hormone
correlated positively with urinary calcium excretion (p less than 0.05) and with urinary hydroxyproline excretion (p less than 0.001). The sensitivity of serum bone GLA-protein measurements in differentiating between primary hyperparathyroidism and hypercalcemia of malignancy was 91% and the specificity 84%. Thus this marker appears to be a useful tool for the differential diagnosis of hypercalcemias.
...
PMID:Serum bone GLA-protein in hypercalcemia of primary hyperparathyroidism and malignancy. 232 Dec 72
Squamous cell carcinoma with hypercalcemia and leukocytosis arising from burn scars in a 45-year-old man is reported. Hypercalcemia and leukocytosis improved with pepleomycin treatment and worsened with recurrence of the tumor. Serum levels of
parathyroid hormone
, prostaglandin E and 25-OH-Vitamin D were within normal limits. Autopsy did not disclose any
bone metastases
or abnormalities of the parathyroid glands. It is suggested that hypercalcemia and leukocytosis were due to factors produced by the squamous cell carcinoma. This is the fifth reported case of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma associated with hypercalcemia in the absence of bone metastasis or parathyroid gland abnormalities.
...
PMID:Squamous cell carcinoma with hypercalcemia and leukocytosis. 242 67
Hypercalcaemia in malignancy is a major clinical problem. It contributes significantly to morbidity and mortality and can present difficult diagnostic and management dilemmas. Direct bony invasion by tumour cells rather than humorally mediated hypercalcaemia is probably the most common cause of malignant hypercalcaemia. Yet even in this situation the mechanism of bone resorption or the reason that the normal homeostatic mechanisms cannot cope with the calcium load are poorly understood. It is likely that the humoral and paracrine factors produced by tumours which result in hypercalcaemia or in osteosclerotic
bone metastases
, are interposing themselves into the normal regulatory processes and deranging them. Humoral hypercalcaemia of malignancy is an important model for studying these questions, and it also provides some insight into the normal regulation of bone turnover. This review will examine the animal models and human syndromes of malignant hypercalcaemia and show how animal models, although helpful, fail to delineate the relative importance of the various potential humoral factors. A most interesting recent development in this area is the description of a new hormone, the
parathyroid hormone
-related peptide, which may explain many of the cases of humoral hypercalcaemia of malignancy. It is also a useful model with multiple sites of action within the bone and calcium homeostatic process. The active hormonal form of vitamin D3, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, may also be involved in a small proportion of cases, but again it is a useful model of some of the factors that may operate. Of considerable interest are the tumour derived factors, such as the transforming growth factors, and the cytokines, such as tumour necrosis factors, interleukins, and haemopoietic colony stimulating factors. Prostanoids are seldom of major importance, but may be important in certain tumour types. Osteosclerotic metastases, although seldom associated with hypercalcaemia, may provide insight into osteoblast regulating factors. Treatment of hypercalcaemia is discussed to show ways in which response to treatment may shed light on underlying pathophysiological mechanisms. Most effective treatments have many potential modes of action, and further study of the interactions of these agents and tumour types may help to unravel some of the enigmas in this human syndrome. The major advances in this complex problem involve the realisation of the necessity of multiple sites of action, including renal calcium handling as well as relative increases in bone resorption and/or intestinal calcium absorption.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hypercalcaemia of malignancy. 266 84
A 50-year-old male with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) had a hypercalcemic crisis with a serum calcium concentration of 7.8 mEq/zeta, without any evidence for
bone metastases
or parathyroid lesions. The hypercalcemia was thought to be due to increased renal reabsorption of calcium and increased bone resorption, which was probably caused by humoral factors derived from the HCC, some being
parathyroid hormone
-like factors. Since conservative therapy for hypercalcemia was not sufficiently effective and was accompanied by progressive exacerbation of ascites and leg edema, transcatheter arterial chemo-embolization (TACE) was performed. On the following day, serum calcium concentration decreased from 6.3 mEq/zeta to the normal range, although serum alpha-fetoprotein levels decreased only slightly. Thereafter hypercalcemia did not develop for about 4 weeks. The results demonstrated that TACE can be effective for humoral hypercalcemia of HCC.
...
PMID:Transcatheter arterial chemo-embolization for humoral hypercalcemia of hepatocellular carcinoma. 283 39
An autopsy case of prostaglandin E-producing hepatocellular carcinoma with hypercalcemia is presented in this article. A 72-year-old man showed high serum calcium levels (14.2 to 17.3 mg/100 ml) and hypophosphatemia. The plasma level of immunoreactive
parathyroid hormone
was below the normal range. Administration of oral indomethacin 50 mg daily was effective in decreasing the serum calcium concentration. However, this effect lasted only 5 days, after which it returned to pretreatment levels. The patient died in a hypercalcemic coma. By an autopsy, hepatocellular carcinoma was found in the right lobe of the liver. However, no obvious
bone metastases
nor abnormalities in the parathyroid glands were detected. The immunoreactive prostaglandin E level assayed in the neoplastic tissue (2278 ng/g) was significantly high when compared with level in the nonneoplastic liver tissue (194 ng/g). The production of prostaglandin E by the tumor itself appears to be the most likely mechanism for the hypercalcemia in this patient.
...
PMID:Prostaglandin-E-producing hepatocellular carcinoma with hypercalcemia. 283 40
Hypercalcemia as a complication of carcinoma of the colon is uncommon (1). It usually occurs in the presence of anorectal or rectal carcinoma that metastasizes to the lumbosacral vertebrae (2-4). Hypercalcemia complicating colon carcinoma in the absence of
bone metastases
--so-called humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy or paraneoplastic hypercalcemia--is rare. Only two such cases associated with adenocarcinoma of the colon (5,6) and two cases associated with adenosquamous carcinoma of the distal colon (rectum and sigmoid) (7) have been reported. We describe the first reported case of an adenosquamous carcinoma of the cecum and ascending colon that was accompanied by severe humoral hypercalcemia. The hypercalcemia was associated with a
parathyroid hormone
(
PTH
)-like substance.
...
PMID:Humoral hypercalcemia complicating adenosquamous carcinoma of the proximal colon. 291 Jun 74
Humoral hypercalcemic syndrome associated with tumors of the female reproductive system is believed to be uncommon, and only 27 such cases have been identified prior to 1980. We describe 2 patients with humoral hypercalcemia in clear cell adenocarcinoma of the uterus, and review the literature on previously published cases. Both our patients fulfilled the criteria for humoral hypercalcemic syndrome, namely: hypercalcemia without
bone metastases
ranging from 12.8 to 14.1 mg/dl in the presence of normal serum
parathyroid hormone
levels, reduced tubular reabsorption of phosphate, and reduced serum albumin. We propose that humoral hypercalcemia is perhaps not a rare complication of uterine malignancy and, that increased awareness may result in early diagnosis of this important metabolic problem.
...
PMID:Paraneoplastic hypercalcemia in endometrial carcinoma. 291 93
In this review different aspects of osteolytic bone metastasis of breast carcinoma including morbidity, pathogenesis, accompanying hypercalcaemia and treatment, are discussed.
Bone metastases
occur in many patients with breast cancer (percentages of up to 85% have been reported); although patients seldom die of
bone metastases
morbidity is pronounced. Literature data point out that humoral factors, such as prostaglandins and the recently described growth factors are of importance beside cell interactions between monocytes, lymphocytes, osteoclasts and tumour cells. Nowadays, no significance is attributed to
parathyroid hormone
(
PTH
) overproduction in this respect. The differential diagnosis between primary hyperparathyroidism and tumour-induced hypercalcaemia is not always easy biochemically; combinations of both do occur less frequently than has been assumed in the past. A new and promising line of investigations involves the growth factors, which can increase osteolytic bone resorption and may bind to epidermal growth factor (EGF) or
PTH
receptors, thus inducing some of the biological effects of
PTH
(including hypercalcaemia). Until recently it was exceedingly difficult to treat tumour-induced hypercalcaemia (TIH) (the acute condition). Since the availability of the bisphosphonates dichloromethylidene bisphosphonate (Cl2MDP) and 3-amino-1-hydroxypropylidene-1, l-bisphosphonate (APD) this treatment has become very simple. Preliminary results, derived from the literature, point out that bisphosphonate treatment might also be effective in providing long-term control.
...
PMID:Osteolytic bone metastases in breast carcinoma pathogenesis, morbidity and bisphosphonate treatment. 294 9
In an attempt to analyze the pathological processes which lead to hypercalcemia in patients with multiple
bone metastases
, 23 advanced breast cancer patients with multiple
bone metastases
, three hypercalcemic patients with other malignancies and seven early breast cancer patients without any distant metastasis were studied. Of the 23 patients with advanced breast cancer, nine showed serum calcium levels higher than 10 mg/dl. In five of the nine hypercalcemic patients with advanced breast cancer, urinary cyclic AMP excretion was lower than 4 nmol/100 ml of glomerular filtrate (GF), indicating that the secretion of
parathyroid hormone
was suppressed. However, urinary cyclic AMP excretion was higher than 4 nmol/100 ml of GF in the other four hypercalcemic patients with advanced breast cancer and three hypercalcemic patients with other malignancies. In patients with higher urinary cyclic AMP excretion, fractional excretion of calcium (FECa) showed a negative correlation (r = 0.83, P less than 0.05) with urinary cyclic AMP. Parathyroid hormone immunoreactivity was not detected in any of six patients showing serum calcium levels higher than 11 mg/dl. These results suggest that in about a half of hypercalcemic patients with advanced breast cancer and multiple bone metastasis, there is a factor which increases urinary cyclic AMP and enhances calcium reabsorption in the kidney, but which is different from
parathyroid hormone
. This factor may facilitate retention of calcium mobilized into the circulation by
bone metastases
, and lead to hypercalcemia.
...
PMID:Stimulation of calcium reabsorption observed in advanced breast cancer patients with hypercalcemia and multiple bone metastases. 298 61
Hypercalcemia in patients with breast cancer is usually attributed to osteolytic
bone metastases
. Seventeen patients with biopsy-proved breast cancer and hypercalcemia were identified in a prospective, unselected manner. Biochemical and clinical evaluation included measurements of
parathyroid hormone
, nephrogenous cAMP, vitamin D metabolites, fasting calcium excretion, and maximal tubular phosphate reabsorption, and bone radionuclide scanning. Tumor histologic findings were also reviewed. Four of the 17 patients (23.5 percent) had no evidence of bone involvement by bone scanning or radiography. Two additional patients (a total of 35 percent) appeared to have a humoral component to their hypercalcemia as determined by the presence of elevated nephrogenous cAMP excretion. These observations suggest that humoral, tumor-derived products may play a more important role in the hypercalcemia of breast cancer than has been previously recognized.
...
PMID:Hypercalcemia in breast cancer. Reassessment of the mechanism. 303 97
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