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Query: UMLS:C0221002 (primary hyperparathyroidism)
4,921 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The generalized use of phosphocalcic biological assays makes the discovery of sporadic primary hyperparathyroidism increasingly common. In 1989-1990, first-intention surgery was performed in 26 female patients. In all cases, an exploratory cervicotomy under cervical peridural anesthesia allowed discovering and treating a parathyroid lesion: adenoma, asymmetric or symmetric hyperplasia, cancer. We discuss: the circumstances of the clinical diagnosis and the biological criteria, the timeliness of preoperative radiological assessment, the surgical strategy advocated. In more than 90% of all cases, a cervicotomy for the exploration of all areas of parathyroid migration should allow curing primary hyperparathyroidism.
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PMID:[Diagnostic and surgical strategy in sporadic primary hyperparathyroidism]. 178 13

Recursive partitioning analysis was compared to logistic, linear and quadratic discriminant analyses in the ability to differentiate hypercalcemic patients with primary hyperparathyroidism from those with malignancy. Stepwise discriminant analysis identified serum albumin as the best single discriminant test. Albumin decision values optimally separating the two hypercalcemic groups were 39.46, 38.54, and 32.25 g/l for the logistic, linear and quadratic discriminant methods, respectively. Recursive partitioning analysis identified carboxy-terminus parathyroid hormone (PTH) as the best discriminant test with an optimal decision value of 8.2 mequiv/l. The discrepancy between the selection of PTH by recursive partitioning analysis and albumin by discriminant techniques was attributed to the nonnormal distribution of PTH. Recursive partitioning analysis using PTH classified 85.4% of the patients correctly. Logistic, linear and quadratic methods, using albumin as the predictor variable, correctly classified 79.6%, 78.6%, and 79.6% of patients, respectively.
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PMID:Comparison of nonparametric recursive partitioning to parametric discriminant analyses in laboratory differentiation of hypercalcemia. 181 62

We have used an immunoradiometric assay (IRMA) to measure intact PTH. The serum-levels of PTH followed a log-normal distribution in a population of 85 healthy post-menopausal women, with a geometric mean of 1.9 pmol/l and a range of 0.8-6.1 pmol/l. The correlation between measurements performed using the IRMA and a radioimmunoassay which measured the C-terminal portion of the PTH molecule was 0.85. It was only the IRMA, however, that could measure subnormal values. Two of 27 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism had PTH-values in the upper reference interval. The rest of the patients had elevated levels. Patients with hypercalcemia due to malignancy had subnormal or low normal (less than 2.5 pmol/l) PTH values. Half of the patients with hypoparathyroidism had PTH below the limit of detection. Four subjects with familial hypercalciuric hypercalcemia had normal (3) or slightly elevated PTH-levels.
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PMID:[Determination of intact parathyroid hormone in patients with calcium metabolism disorders]. 185 14

We report the development of a two-site immunoradiometric assay for PTH(1-84) based on two site-specific monoclonal antibodies--3B3 (radiolabelled antibody) specific for PTH(1-34) and ESQ1 (on solid phase) specific for PTH(74-84). Antibody 3B3 is sensitive to the oxidation of the methionine residues in PTH(1-34) therefore hydrogen peroxide (0.1 M) is added to the incubation mixture. Validation studies confirm quantitative recovery of both oxidized and reduced PTH(1-84). The assay has a minimum detection limit of 0.5 pmol/L and a range of 1.5-250 pmol/L with an intra-assay CV of less than 10% (2.8-250 pmol/L less than 5% CV). Studies on clinical samples indicate good discrimination between normal subjects (mean 2.21; range 1.0-5.0 pmol/L) and patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (mean 21.0; range 5.8-100 pmol/L) who in turn are well separated from patients with hypercalcaemia of malignancy (14/18 less than 0.5 pmol/L).
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PMID:A two-site immunoradiometric assay for PTH(1-84) using N and C terminal specific monoclonal antibodies. 185 54

An examination of registered cases of parathyroid tumor in Hiroshima Prefecture between 1974 and 1987 revealed 23 cases. An epidemiological study showed that the incidence of parathyroid tumors in Hiroshima Prefecture was significantly higher in the total exposed, especially among the proximally exposed (within 2,000 m from the hypocenter), than in the control nonexposed group (P less than 0.001). A similar trend was seen for parathyroid tumor associated with primary hyperparathyroidism.
Jpn J Cancer Res 1991 Aug
PMID:Parathyroid tumors in atomic bomb survivors in Hiroshima: epidemiological study from registered cases at Hiroshima Prefecture Tumor Tissue Registry, 1974-1987. 191 24

Proximal femur fractures in elderly people are more and more frequent. Falls and senile bone disorders are the risk factors of this fracture. In order to understand the mechanisms of these bone disorders, we studied 21 consecutive patients with this fracture using bone histomorphometry. Measurements of serum intact parathormone (PTH), 25-(OH)-vitamin D, 1,25-(OH) 2-vitamin D and osteocalcin have been performed in these 21 patients, included in a larger series. We excluded patients with renal failure (serum creatinine greater than 140 mumols/l), cancer, or previous metabolic bone disease. There were 19 female and 2 male patients, ranging from 75 to 96 years, (mean 84.9). We found a low frequency of cortical (2/21) and trabecular (3/21) osteoporosis. There was no case of clearcut osteomalacia. Following histomorphometric bone study, two patients showed a typical pattern of hyperparathyroidism, and in a third one, this condition seemed very likely. In these three patients who were among the oldest, and who had high levels of serum PTH, chronic renal failure and primary hyperparathyroidism could be excluded. High bone remodeling was frequent in our patients, as reflected by the enhancement of eroded surfaces (13 cases) and of osteoid thickness (7 cases). Intact PTH level was elevated in our series compared to normal values in adults (in accordance to the PTH elevation in the case control study in a larger series). These findings suggest a major role of a secondary hyperparathyroidism in senile bone disorders favoring proximal femur fractures. This hyperparathyroidism is probably secondary to mild calcium and vitamin D deficiency. It may lead to architectural bone changes favoring this fracture.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hyperparathyroidism in proximal femur fractures biological and histomorphometric study in 21 patients over 75 years old. 191 14

In 53 patients with malignancy-associated hypercalcemia, we measured serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) with an immunoradiometric assay (IRMA) for intact PTH and a midregion-specific radioimmunoassay (RIA). Values were measured at baseline to detect clinically unrecognized hyperparathyroidism and after treatment with intravenous bisphosphonate to test for a parathyroid response. One patient probably had primary hyperparathyroidism, since his serum PTH values were not appropriately suppressed at baseline and increased markedly during treatment before normocalcemia was achieved. In each of the 51 other evaluable cases, the intact PTH value was suppressed below 25 pg/ml (normal range 10-55 pg/ml), confirming a nonparathyroid hypercalcemia. Midregion PTH values were less fully suppressed but supported the diagnosis in 44 out of 49 cases. The five patients with high midregion PTH values each had renal insufficiency but in four, the intact PTH values were also the highest we observed in these patients. This suggests either a poorly suppressible intact PTH secretion or prolongation of intact PTH half-life by the renal insufficiency. Overall, midregion and intact PTH values were highly correlated (p less than 0.001). Restoration of normocalcemia increased PTH in both assays into or within the normal range, and when posttreatment hypocalcemia occurred, PTH values became elevated in both assays. We conclude the following: (1) both assays are useful for detecting parathyroid hyperfunction but the intact PTH assay is the better diagnostic tool when renal insufficiency is present, (2) hypercalcemia seems to suppress intact PTH secretion more fully than secretion of PTH fragments, and (3) parathyroid glands chronically suppressed by hypercalcemia can increase PTH secretion within 1 or 2 days after the hypercalcemia is corrected.
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PMID:Malignancy hypercalcemia: evaluation of parathyroid function and response to treatment. 192 31

The nuclear DNA content of paraffin-embedded parathyroid tumors from 49 patients with proven primary hyperparathyroidism was determined by flow cytometric analysis. The lesions included 14 primary and 11 locally recurrent or metastatic lesions from 16 carcinoma patients, 28 single adenomas from 28 patients, and 15 hyperplastic glands from five patients with familial multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1. No abnormal DNA stemline was found in any of the hyperplastic glands. One (3.6%) of the adenomas was aneuploid. There was no difference in ploidy patterns between the primary and recurrent lesions of the carcinomas and five (31%) of the carcinomas expressed aneuploidy. Four of the five patients with aneuploid carcinoma had recurrences including pulmonary metastases. One of them died of this disease 12 years after the initial operation, and all except one of the others are hypercalcemic even after removal of the successive recurrent or metastatic tumors. Of the 11 patients with diploid carcinoma, four had either local recurrence or pulmonary metastasis. Two of them are living with normocalcemia 3 and 6 years, respectively, after removal of the recurrent tumors and the others are alive with mild hypercalcemia. The remaining seven patients with diploid carcinoma, however, have no recurrence 2 to 5 years after the initial operation. Thus aneuploid parathyroid carcinomas are likely to show more malignant behavior than those with a diploid DNA pattern. All of the patients with adenoma and hyperplasia have been normocalcemic after a mean follow-up interval of 37 months. This study indicates that flow cytometric analysis of nuclear DNA content is a valuable adjunct to histologic examination in the diagnosis of parathyroid carcinoma and the prediction of the clinical outcome.
Cancer 1990 Apr 15
PMID:Flow cytometric DNA analysis of parathyroid tumors with special reference to its diagnostic and prognostic value in parathyroid carcinoma. 196 27

The recent chromosomal mapping of the genes for two different autosomal dominant inherited predispositions to multiple endocrine neoplasias promises to be a significant breakthrough for the understanding of the pathogenesis of such lesions. Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) associates primary hyperparathyroidism, lesions of the endocrine pancreas and pituitary adenomas. The first hint that the MEN1 gene is localized on chromosome 11 came from the finding of allele losses in MEN1 associated tumours. Subsequent genetic linkage analysis to restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) markers assigned the gene to chromosome band 11q13. MEN2A is characterized by medullary thyroid carcinoma and phaeochromocytoma. The disease locus was localized to the centromeric region of chromosome 10 by genetic linkage. For both syndromes genetic linkage maps of the flanking regions have been established, and a set of RFLP markers is now available for premorbid identification of gene carriers in affected families. Analysis of allele losses showed that tumorigenesis of parathyroid and pancreatic lesions results from unmasking of a recessive mutation at the MEN1 locus, and by deletion mapping the tentative MEN1 region was restricted to a few million base pairs. In contrast, such losses appear to be relatively rare in MEN2A associated lesions.
Cancer Surv 1990
PMID:Multiple endocrine neoplasia. 198 11

Parathyrin (parathyroid hormone; PTH) was measured with three immunoassays: a two-site immunochemiluminometric (ICMA) and a two-site immunoradiometric (IRMA) method for intact PTH, and a sensitive radioimmunoassay for mid-region or "total" PTH, measuring both intact hormone and inactive fragments. Single specimens from normal subjects and from individuals with primary hyperparathyroidism, hypercalcemia associated with malignancy, and hypoparathyroidism were analyzed with all three methods. All individuals with primary hyperparathyroidism showed absolutely above-normal concentrations with the mid-region RIA, 28 of 29 did with the ICMA, and 21 of 29 did with the IRMA. PTH concentrations in primary hyperparathyroidism were most increased relative to normal subjects with the mid-region assay (10.4 times), less so with the intact assays (ICMA 5.5 times; IRMA 5.3 times). Concentrations of intact PTH were suppressed below normal in nearly all patients with hypercalcemia associated with malignancy, as measured with the ICMA (26 of 30) and the IRMA (28 of 30) assays. In marked contrast, results for mid-region PTH were normal or slightly above normal, consistent with studies suggesting that the parathyroids secrete both intact hormone and inactive fragments, the former being more sensitive to suppression by hypercalcemia. In hypoparathyroidism PTH concentrations were detectable but below normal in all patients by the intact assays and in all but one patient by the mid-region assay. These low concentrations are probably due to a nonspecific serum effect that could be resolved with selection of a more appropriate standard matrix. Although all three assays are useful in the differential diagnosis of hypercalcemia, two-site intact assays are more convenient and more specific in patients with compromised renal function.
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PMID:Immunochemiluminometric and immunoradiometric determinations of intact and total immunoreactive parathyrin: performance in the differential diagnosis of hypercalcemia and hypoparathyroidism. 199 16


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