Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0221002 (primary hyperparathyroidism)
4,921 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Increasing attention is being focused on the relationship between gastrointestinal hormones and calcium metabolism. While it is apparent that some relationship does exist, the exact nature and significance is as yet undefined. Information regarding the effect of secretin on serum calcium has been both sparse and contradictory. Boot's secretin, 3 units/kg, was given to a group of 44 patients consisting of normal controls and patients with duodenal, gastric, and marginal ulcers; primary hyperparathyroidism; and pernicious anemia. Six serial serum specimens were obtained from each patient at ten-minute intervals for calcium determination by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Using two-way analysis of variance, no significant changes in postsecretin serum calcium values were observed. It is unlikely that physiologic levels of secretin exert any effect on serum calcium.
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PMID:Serum calcium responses to exogenous secretin. 119 Oct 13

Three cases of carcinoid tumour of the stomach associated with primary hyperparathyroidism had the clinical and pathological features of a pluriglandular syndrome. Two of the patients showed multiple small polypoid carcinoids in the non-antral stomach, in conjunction with a parathyroid adenoma in one and parathyroid hyperplasia in the other case. One of these patients was also suffering from pernicious anaemia. A third patient had a large metastasising carcinoid arising in the gastric body and a parathyroid adenoma. Immunohistochemical stains for PGP 9.5 were positive in the carcinoids of all three cases. In all cases the carcinoids showed immunoreactivity for gastrin. A positive family history of endocrine hyperplasia and neoplasia was established in one case. It is suggested that patients with gastrointestinal carcinoids and their families should be evaluated for hyperparathyroidism, and patients with hyperparathyroidism presenting with upper gastrointestinal symptoms should undergo endoscopy to rule out gastric carcinoid tumours.
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PMID:Carcinoid tumour of stomach and primary hyperparathyroidism: a new association. 295 64

In order to evaluate the possible causal relationship between raised serum gastrin levels and the development of primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) which is suggested from experimental studies we evaluated parathyroid function in a group of 32 patients with hypergastrinaemia and pernicious anaemia. The values for serum calcium and parathyroid hormone were determined as well as the fasting urinary excretions of cyclic AMP and calcium. There was no relationship between the serum gastrin levels and any of the other studied parameters and there was no consistent pattern suggesting parathyroid hyperfunction. A retrospective analysis of hospital records from 441 patients operated for primary HPT showed a prevalence of pernicious anaemia of 1.8%. This figure is higher than that found in the unselected age-matched population (0.31%). However, taken together this study does not support the hypothesis that hypergastrinaemia is of particular importance for the pathogenesis of primary HPT.
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PMID:Evaluation of parathyroid function in patients with hypergastrinaemia and pernicious anaemia. 629 36

Available evidence suggests that fracture prediction with bone densitometry may improve when used on people at high risk of osteoporotic fractures. The objectives of this literature review were: (1) to identify risk factors for fracture that are associated with the development of a low bone mass for both men and women; (2) to describe and assess the relationship between these factors and the risk of fracture; and (3) to classify them according to the strength of their association with fracture incidence. Studies were identified from MEDLINE (1982-1997), HealthSTAR (1975-1997) and The Cochrane Library (1997) databases. Pre-stated inclusion criteria (original analytic studies assessing risk factors for osteoporotic fractures in men and women) and methodologic quality were assessed by two independent investigators. Information on the study design and analysis, characteristics of participants, exposure (risk factor) and outcome measures (relative risk and odds ratios for fracture incidence), control for potential confounding factors and risk estimates was extracted using a standardized protocol. Qualitative and meta-analytic techniques were used for data synthesis. As a result, risk factors were classified into three groups according to their strength of association with fracture: high risk (RR > or = 2), moderate risk (1 < RR < 2) and no risk or protective (RR < or = 1). Of approximately 80 risk factors identified from 94 cohort and 72 case-control studies, 15% were classified in the high-risk group, including low body weight, loss of weight, physical inactivity, the consumption of corticosteroids or anticonvulsants, primary hyperparathyroidism, diabetes mellitus type 1, anorexia nervosa, gastrectomy, pernicious anemia, and aging (> 70-80 years). Eighteen percent and 8% of risk factors were classified in the moderate and no risk group respectively, whereas 60% showed either a lack of scientific evidence confirming their association with fracture or contradictory results. An efficient strategy for bone densitometry provision may thus be its selective use in those individuals who present with several strong or moderate risk factors for fracture related to bone mass loss.
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PMID:Identifying bone-mass-related risk factors for fracture to guide bone densitometry measurements: a systematic review of the literature. 1171 83