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Query: UMLS:C0221002 (
primary hyperparathyroidism
)
4,921
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An unusual case of rickets associated with hypercalciuria is described. In addition to proteinuria, the patient had phosphaturia, aminoaciduria, renal glucosuria and impaired renal concentration but no
renal tubular acidosis
. Studies did not support the diagnosis of
primary hyperparathyroidism
. The findings in the patient were very similar to those in 4 previously reported cases and are suggestive of a new combination of multiple renal tubular defects.
...
PMID:Hypercalciuric rickets: a rare cause of nephrolithiasis. 624 64
Using the ambulatory protocol previously described, 241 patients with nephrolithiasis were evaluated. They could be categorized into 10 groups from the results obtained. Absorptive hypercalciuria type I (87 per cent male) comprised 24.5 per cent and was characterized by normocalcemia, normal fasting urinary calcium (less than 0.11 mg/100 ml glomerular filtration), an exaggerated urinary calcium following an oral calcium load (greater than 0.20 mg/mg creatinine), normal urinary cyclic adenosine monophosphate (AMP) (less than 5.4 nmol/100 ml glomerular filtration) and serum parathyroid hormone (PTH), and hypercalciuria (greater than 200 mg/day during a calcium- and sodium-restricted diet). Absorptive hypercalciuria type II (50 per cent male) accounted for 29.8 per cent; its biochemical features were the same as those for absorptive hypercalciuria type I, except for normocalciuria during a restricted diet and low urine volume (1.42 +/- 0.55 SD liter/day). Renal hypercalciuria (56 per cent male), disclosed in 8.3 per cent, was represented by normocalcemia and high values for fasting urinary calcium (0.160 +/- 0.054 mg/100 ml glomerular filtration), urinary cyclic AMP (6.80 +/- 2.10 nmol/100 ml glomerular filtration) and serum PTH.
Primary hyperparathyroidism
(57 per cent female), accounted for 5.8 per cent, typically included hypercalcemia, hypophosphatemia, hypercalciuria and high urinary cyclic AMP. Hyperuricosuric calcium urolithiasis (100 per cent male) comprised 8.7 per cent, and was characterized by hyperuricosuria (776 +/- 164 mg/day) and urinary pH exceeding pK for uric acid (5.91 +/- 0.33). In enteric hyperoxaluria (60 per cent female), encountered in 2.1 per cent of cases, urinary oxalate was increased (6.29 +/- 13.2 mg/day). Noncalcium-containing stones were found in 2.1 per cent of the patients with uric acid lithiasis (100 per cent male) and in another 2.1 per cent of the patients with infection lithiasis (60 per cent female). These conditions were typified by low urinary pH (5.29 +/- 0.12) and high urinary pH (6.69 +/- 1.16), respectively.
Renal tubular acidosis
was found in one patient (male, 0.4 per cent). In 10.8 per cent of the patients (81 per cent male), no metabolic abnormality could be found, although urine volume was low (1.41 +/- 0.51 liter/day). Hypercalciuria could not be differentiated between absorptive hypercalciuria and renal hypercalciuria in 5.4 per cent of the patients. Thus, this ambulatory protocol disclosed a physiologic disturbance in nearly 90 per cent of the cases and provided a definitive diagnosis in 95 per cent of the patients.
...
PMID:Ambulatory evaluation of nephrolithiasis. Classification, clinical presentation and diagnostic criteria. 624 14
Phosphate stones are divided in two groups: I. Infection stones = triple phosphate stones (struvite and carbonate apatite). II. Calcium phosphate stones = Hydroxy apatite. Ad I. For the formation of this stone, infection with urease-producing bacteria is essential. It is important to look for factors that cause infection and for metabolic abnormalities. Three possibilities for treatment are discussed: Acidifying the urine: orally with NH4NO3 or NH4Cl; dosage is possible up to 12 g a day (metabolic acidosis!). Irrigation for instance with Renacidin ; when using a nephrostomy-tube, one can start 5 days after the operation. It is important to look for fever and flank pain. Especially useful in cases with small residual stones. Reduction of phosphate excretion in urine ( Shorr -regimen). Some aluminium combinations reduce the intestinal phosphate absorption as a result of the formation of a nonabsorbable aluminium-phosphate combination. This can be combined with a low calcium- and phosphate diet. In several publications good results are shown. Also when using a less rigid regimen, satisfactory results are seen: decrease of the phosphate excretion from 30 to 17 mmol/24 h (own investigation). Urease-inhibitors result in a lower urine-pH and a decrease of the ammonium-concentration. there are only a few publications with results, but AHA seems able to reduce the stone size in 24% of the patients. Ad II. This stone is concerning formation and treatment much like the calcium oxalate stone. In case of an alkaline urine one must look for
primary hyperparathyroidism
and
renal tubular acidosis
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Conservative therapy of phosphate calculi]. 653 26
The urinary citrate excretion was examined in patients with nephrolithiasis who were categorized on the basis of different physiologic or metabolic abnormalities. A wide prevalence of low citrate excretion (hypocitraturia) was observed, with over one half of our patients with stones exhibiting it. Hypocitraturia was found in all patient categories except
primary hyperparathyroidism
and hyperuricosuric calcium oxalate nephrolithiasis. As expected, hypocitraturia was present in
renal tubular acidosis
and in enteric hyperoxaluria. However, urinary citrate was also low in absorptive and renal hypercalciurias, and in patients in whom an acid-base disturbance was clearly excluded.
...
PMID:Low urinary citrate excretion in nephrolithiasis. 682 13
389 consecutive renal stone formers (275 males, 114 females) were investigated in an out-patient stone clinic.
Renal tubular acidosis
(
RTA
) was found in 83 patients (22%). Proximal RTA was twice as common as the distal tubular type. The acidification defects were exclusively of the incomplete form with normal basal blood acidbase status. Main diagnoses besides
RTA
were
primary hyperparathyroidism
(3.5%), medullary sponge kidney (3.5%), infection induced stones (3%), urate stones (2%), intestinal disorder (1.5%) and cystinuria (0.5%). The metabolic evaluation was mainly based on 24 h urine sampling on a free diet. In 248 patients (64%) no distinct abnormality was considered to be primarily responsible for stone formation. Clinical and biochemical analysis of these so-called idiopathic stone formers disclosed a male preponderance (80%) and, compared to a non-stone-forming control group, a higher urinary calcium excretion, yet with a considerable overlap between the two groups. Hyperuricosuria and hyperoxaluria were rare findings. The conclusion of the study is given as a proposal for clinical classification and ambulatory investigation of renal stone formers.
...
PMID:Ambulatory diagnostic evaluation of 389 recurrent renal stone formers. A proposal for clinical classification and investigation. 684 37
The aetiology of nephrolithiasis was investigated in 32 north Indian children (25 boys, 7 girls, mean age 7.9 +/- 3.3 years). An underlying disorder was detected in 16 (50%) patients and included idiopathic hypercalciuria (8 patients), hyperoxaluria (3 patients) and
renal tubular acidosis
,
primary hyperparathyroidism
and hyperuricosuria (1 patient each). Magnesium ammonium phosphate calculi were found in 2 patients with recurrent urinary tract infections, 1 of whom had a duplex pelvic collecting system. In 16 patients (50%) a cause for renal calculi was not identified. Our findings suggest that an underlying disorder is present in a large proportion of children with nephrolithiasis where appropriate treatment may be beneficial.
...
PMID:Aetiology of nephrolithiasis in north Indian children. 757 12
Medullary nephrocalcinosis occurs in various diseases as a non-specific renal manifestation. We present 5 patients (hypophosphataemic rickets, type 1
renal tubular acidosis
,
primary hyperparathyroidism
, hypercalcaemia of unclear origin, chronic renal insufficiency requiring dialysis) in whom a medullary nephrocalcinosis was demonstrated by means of sonographically detectable changes in the renal medulla region. The sonographic appearance of medullary nephrocalcinosis is characterized by detection of echo-enhanced structures in the region of the renal pyramids. The presence of a medullary nephrocalcinosis can generally be confirmed with adequate reliability on the basis of sonographic findings and characteristic clinical pictures. In individual cases it is difficult to distinguish between medullary nephrocalcinosis and renal calyx calculi.
...
PMID:Medullary nephrocalcinosis: sonographic findings in adult patients. 775 19
Evaluations of 1,270 patients with recurrent nephrolithiasis in an outpatient setting were analyzed for the purpose of updating the classification of nephrolithiasis. All but 4% had abnormal urinary biochemistry that placed them into one or more of 20 etiologic categories. A single diagnosis was documented in 41.3% of patients. The remaining 58.7% had more than one diagnosis. Hypercalciuric calcium (Ca) nephrolithiasis, encountered in 60.9% of patients, comprised six variants--absorptive hypercalciuria Type I and II, renal hypercalciuria,
primary hyperparathyroidism
, and unclassified hypercalciuria (renal phosphate leak and fasting hypercalciuria). Hyperuricosuria Ca nephrolithiasis (HUCN) and gouty diathesis (GD) accounted for 35.8% and 10.0% of patients, respectively. Distinguishing features were hyperuricosuria and normal urinary pH in HUCN, and normal urinary uric acid and low urinary pH (< 5.5) in GD. Hyperoxaluric Ca nephrolithiasis, occurring in 8.1% of patients, was subdivided into enteric, primary, and dietary variants. Hypocitraturic Ca nephrolithiasis affected 28% of patients in its idiopathic variant. Many of these patients' problems were probably dietary in origin, while some could have had incomplete
renal tubular acidosis
. Hypocitraturia due to
renal tubular acidosis
or chronic diarrheal syndrome affected only 3.3% of patients. Hypomagnesiuric Ca nephrolithiasis, infection stones, and cystinuria were uncommon, accounting for 6.8%, 5.9%, and 0.9% of patients, respectively. The acquired problem of low urine volume (< 1 L/d) was found in 15.3% of patients. The remaining 3.5% of patients were difficult to classify despite the presence of abnormal urinary biochemistry.
...
PMID:Ambulatory evaluation of nephrolithiasis: an update of a 1980 protocol. 782 19
The dietary habits of renal stone formers appear to differ from those of the general population. Renal stone formers seem to eat more oxalate, more flesh protein and less vegetable fibres than their normal counterparts. Often their urine volume is low. These are environmental factors which govern nephrolithiasis. Subtle underlying defects are detected not infrequently in these patients; for example, medullary sponge kidneys, abnormally structured macromolecular inhibitors of calcium oxalate crystallization (nephrocalcin and Tamm-Horsfall protein), incomplete distal
renal tubular acidosis
, deficient activation of pyridoxine, defective intestinal absorption of citrate, excessive production of interleukin-1 by monocytes, subtle
primary hyperparathyroidism
, heterozygosity for cystinuria, and, discovered more recently, abnormal chloride channels along the nephron. Many of these defects are inheritable, but carriers of the trait are not always active stone formers. The opinion forwarded in this review is that combinations of the environmental and of the underlying or genetic defects are required to trigger renal stone disease.
...
PMID:Genetic versus environmental factors in renal stone disease. 882 32
In this study, we report an 84-year-old female proband in a Japanese family with familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia (FHH) caused by an R648stop mutation in the extracellular calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) gene. At the age of 71 years, she presented with hypercalcemia (11.4 mg/dl), hypocalciuria (Cca/Ccr = 0.003), hypermagnesemia (2.9 mg/dl), and a high-serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) level (midregion PTH, 3225 [160-520] pg/ml). At the age of 74 years, a family screening was carried out and revealed a total of 9 hypercalcemic individuals (all intact PTH values <62 pg/dl) among 17 family members tested, thus, being diagnosed as FHH. Two and one-half of three clearly enlarged parathyroid glands were resected, because persistently high PTH levels (intact PTH, 292 pg/ml; midregion PTH, 5225 pg/ml) and the presence of a markedly enlarged parathyroid gland by several imaging modalities (ultrasonography, computed tomography [CT], magnetic resonance imaging [MRI], and subtraction scintigraphy) suggested coexistent
primary hyperparathyroidism
(pHPT); however, hypercalcemia persisted postoperatively. Histological and immunohistochemical examination revealed that the resected parathyroid glands showed lipohyperplasia as well as normally expressed Ki67, vitamin D receptor (VDR), and the CaR. Sequence analysis disclosed that the proband and all affected family members had a heterozygous nonsense (R648stop) mutation in the CaR gene. This mutation is located in the first intracellular loop; thus, it would be predicted to produce a truncated CaR having only one transmembrane domain (TMD) and lacking its remaining TMDs, intracellular loops, and C-terminal tail. Western analysis of biotinylated HEK293 cells transiently transfected with this mutant receptor showed cell surface expression of the truncated protein at a level comparable with that of the wild-type CaR. The mutant receptor, however, exhibited no increase in intracellular free calcium concentration (Ca2+i) when exposed to high extracellular calcium concentrations (Ca2+o). The proband's clinical course was complicated because of associated
renal tubular acidosis
(
RTA
) and nephrotic syndrome. However, it was unclear whether their association affected the development of elevated serum PTH and parathyroid gland enlargement. This report is the first to show that an R648stop CaR mutation yields a truncated receptor that is expressed on the cell surface but is devoid of biological activity, resulting in FHH.
...
PMID:Familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia caused by an R648stop mutation in the calcium-sensing receptor gene. 1246 11
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