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

Patients with primary hyperparathyroidism are often elderly with cardiovascular disease and in some an operation might be hazardous owing to anaesthetic complications. A technique for operation for primary hyperparathyroidism under local anaesthesia is described. The method uses a unilateral approach. Seventeen consecutive patients operated on under local anaesthesia were compared with a group of 15 patients undergoing surgery under general anaesthesia. Normocalcaemia was achieved in 14 patients in each group. There was no difference in the extent of pain or the overall well-being between the two groups as determined by a visual analogue scale. Patients receiving local anaesthesia, however, experienced significantly less nausea after operation (P < 0.01). There was more fluctuation in blood pressure and heart rate in the general anaesthesia group compared with the other group. Surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism can be performed safely under local anaesthesia, and could be offered to patients if general anaesthesia were not suitable or involved an increased perioperative risk. It should not be recommended for routine use in patients who are fit for general anaesthesia.
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PMID:Surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism performed under local anaesthesia. 142 61

Between 1959 and Oct. 1990, 307 cases of primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) were operated on in our hospital. Among them, 23 cases (7.5%) were asymptomatic chemical type of PHPT, and the incidence of this type has been increasing these days. Various symptoms or signs including urolithiasis, bone disease, cardiovascular disease, gastrointestinal disease, diabetes mellitus and others were associated with PHPT. Especially, as a lethal factor, malignant tumors developed in 14 cases (4.6%); 9 cases of non-medullary thyroid cancer and tumors of other organs. In consideration of these associated disorders, the chemical type of PHPT should be operated prophylactically. In order to reduce operative complications, unilateral exploration is available for the cases of single normally localized adenoma; 85.7% of our 307 cases. Moreover, the positive rate of preoperative localized test by CT and ultrasonography for such adenomas is 78% in the recent 5 years. The predictive values of successful operation by unilateral exploration are 89% in the cases of normally localized single adenoma and 76% in all PHPT.
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PMID:[Primary hyperparathyroidism: problems on surgical indication and procedure]. 175 9

The need for treatment of mild and apparently asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) is questioned, but a raised incidence of cardiovascular disease has been regarded as evidence in favour of surgery. While it is well known that several risk factors for cardiovascular disease (hypertension, hyperlipidaemia and diabetes mellitus/impaired glucose tolerance) are overrepresented in HPT, it is not known whether surgery provides long-term normalization in these respects and reduces the risk of premature death. In a 15-year follow-up of a cohort of 172 subjects in whom mild hypercalcaemia was initially detected during a health screening, it was found that 56 subjects had died. 17 individuals had been operated on for HPT, 47 individuals were persistently hypercalcaemic, while 45 subjects had serum calcium within the normal range (seven individuals were lost to follow-up). There had been no significant differences in blood pressure between these groups of mildly hypercalcaemic patients and age- and sex-matched controls at the initial screening, but at follow-up blood pressure was significantly higher not only in subjects with persistent hypercalcaemia, but also in those who had been successfully operated on for HPT. Neither of the hypercalcaemic groups showed any significant deviations from the controls with regard to indices of lipid or glucose metabolism. These findings suggest that there is no simple cause-and-effect relationship to account for the propensity toward high blood pressure in primary HPT. Consequently it cannot be assumed that surgery for HPT will eliminate the increased risk of cardiovascular disease in patients with mild HPT.
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PMID:Cardiovascular risk factors in primary hyperparathyroidism: a 15-year follow-up of operated and unoperated cases. 206 9

Primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) has shown prevalence of up to 3% among elderly women in Nordic health screening surveys, and is increasingly diagnosed in patients with diffuse neuromuscular or psychiatric symptoms. Primary HPT, even with mild hypercalcemia, is associated with increased mortality risk, mainly from cardiovascular disease. Despite the efficacy of new methods, reliable histopathologic distinction between adenomatous and hyperplastic parathyroid disease may still be difficult, and indeed circumstantial evidence suggests that adenoma and chief cell hyperplasia are not always distinctly separate pathophysiologic entities. Irrespective of symptoms, the hyperplasia is associated mainly with mild to moderate hypercalcemia, and may thus constitute an early form of HPT. A more liberal attitude to surgery in primary HPT would increasingly extend treatment to less clear-cut cases. The demonstration by monoclonal antiparathyroid antibodies of a specialized calcium receptor mechanism on the surface of parathyroid cells and its reduced expression in pathologic parathyroid tissue seems to explain defective parathyroid cell function and ensuing hypercalcemia in HPT. These antibodies appear to offer new prospects in parathyroid histopathology and research.
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PMID:Clinical and experimental advances in sporadic primary hyperparathyroidism. 218 96

A follow-up study of patients operated on for primary hyperparathyroidism revealed that recurrent hypercalcemia is uncommon in patients with solitary adenoma, but common in patients with multiglandular disease. The result of parathyroidectomy on the different symptoms of primary hyperparathyroidism is good. On the other hand, even after successful surgery, patients with primary hyperparathyroidism have poorer health than controls, and they also have a higher mortality rate. Most of the deaths in the primary hyperparathyroidism group are caused by cardiovascular disease. The effect of the preoperative serum calcium level on the later state of health is evident.
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PMID:Natural history of treated primary hyperparathyroidism. 356 40

Comparing patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (PHP) to a normocalcemic control population, those with PHP have a higher incidence of cardiovascular disease and cardiac abnormalities. This study aimed at correlating cardiac findings (valvular and myocardial calcification, myocardial hypertrophy) with clinical data (age, sex, clinical manifestation, nephrolithiasis, nephrocalcinosis, hypertension, skeletal abnormalities, hypercalcemic syndrome) and biochemical data (serum calcium, serum phosphate, serum iPTH level, serum creatinine). A group of 132 consecutive patients with surgically verified PHP (94 women, 38 men; ages 15-86, mean age 57 +/- 16 years) were included in this study. Blood chemistry, clinical presentation, radiography, and echocardiography were carried out in all patients for univariate and multivariate analyses of all parameters. There was no statistical correlation between clinical symptoms, biochemical data, and cardiac calcific alterations. Typical skeletal manifestations (osteolysis/subperiostal resorption) and valvular calcifications were significantly correlated to left ventricular hypertrophy (p = 0.005). Cardiac abnormalities such as calcific myocardial deposits or mitral and aortic valvular calcifications do not correlate with laboratory findings and clinical presentation at the time of diagnosis. There was no biochemical or clinical variable that could predict the frequency or severity of valvular sclerosis or calcific deposits in the myocardium. However, PHP-related skeletal abnormalities and valvular calcification were predicting factors for left ventricular hypertrophy, a reversible cardiac manifestation of PHP. Myocardial hypertrophy is more often found with classic symptomatic PHP with osseous abnormalities.
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PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism and the heart: cardiac abnormalities correlated to clinical and biochemical data. 772 54

Primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) is associated with cardiovascular disease, but there are no systematic studies on the electrocardiographic findings in HPT. Preoperative electrocardiograms from 139 patients with primary HPT and 97 control patients were therefore investigated. Serum calcium levels were found to be significantly correlated to the QRS amplitude (r = .26, P < .002), ST-segment duration (r = -.55, P < .0001), QT interval (r = -.64, P < .0001), and T wave duration (r = .19, P < .009). These relations were still significant when the influence of age, sex, and blood pressure level were taken into account in the multiple regression analysis. Thus, the electrocardiograms from HPT patients, compared to normocalcemic control patients, showed a shorter duration of the ST-segment, representing the systolic interval, and an increased amplitude of the QRS complex, representing ventricular muscle mass. Furthermore, the duration of the T wave was significantly prolonged in HPT patients. The hemodynamic effects of these findings have to be further evaluated.
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PMID:Serum calcium and the ECG in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. 820 1

The prevalence of hypercalcaemia in the adult population is probably between 0.6 and 1.1%, sufferers being predominantly women over 50 years of age. Most apparently asymptomatic hypercalcaemic patients are found to have primary hyperparathyroidism, and may in fact show some symptoms of the condition (lowered bone mineral density, cardiovascular disease and/or neuropsychiatric symptoms). The criteria for surgical intervention in these cases are discussed in the light of the high success rate of parathyroidectomy in experienced hands and the lack of effective alternative treatments.
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PMID:Asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism. 875 7

The resting cardiac output pre- and postoperatively in 10 patients with asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism has been studied. All patients had normal renal function and arterial blood pressure without a previous history of cardiovascular disease. Ten normotensive patients with a non-toxic goitre awaiting thyroidectomy were studied as controls. The mean cardiac output of the hyperparathyroid patients was 7.2 l/minute (range 5.3-8.9) and of the control group 5.8 l/minute (range 5.2-6.3). Following a successful parathyroidectomy with return of the serum calcium to normal, the mean cardiac output was 6.3 l/minute (range 4.9-7.8) (p < 0.04). In 8 of the 10 patients there was a fall in the cardiac output following surgery; in 2 there was an increase. These results suggest that hyperparathyroid patients often have an elevated cardiac output which may fall following a successful parathyroidectomy.
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PMID:Cardiac output in asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism: a stigma of early cardiovascular dysfunction? 891 86

Anesthesia for surgery of primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) usually concerns asymptomatic elderly women with moderate hypercalcemia. Cardiovascular repercussions of the endocrine disorder are possible, but they are not frequent except for hypertension. Hyperparathyroid crisis is a life-threatening condition with severe hypercalcemia. Intravenous diphosphonates are very effective drugs to control hypercalcemia. The improvement is transient but allows curative parathyroidectomy to be performed with a minimal risk of cardiac arrhythmias. Anesthesia for surgery of secondary HPT concerns patients with chronic renal failure treated by hemodialysis. Cardiovascular disease is frequent and aggravated by the endocrine disorder. In patients with marked aortic stenosis or severe left ventricular dysfunction, parathyroidectomy should be performed by cervicotomy under local anesthesia. Hyperparathyroidism may persist after renal transplantation (tertiary HPT): in this case cardiovascular disease is minimal and the hypercalcemia is moderate. Parathyroidectomy is usually performed by cervicotomy under general anesthesia. Sternotomy is required in the case of an abnormal mediastinal location of a gland. An interaction between myorelaxants and hyperparathyroidism has been observed. Total blood calcium must be systematically assayed postoperatively because postoperative hypocalcemia is constant. Hypocalcemia is moderate in primary and tertiary HPT, due to transient functional hypoparathyroidism, with lowest observed the 2nd or 3rd postoperative day. Hypocalcemia should not be treated when asymptomatic because it resolutes on the 4th or 5th postoperative day. Intravenous calcium infusion may be necessary for 1 or 2 days, if serum calcium is below 1.9 mmol per liter with symptoms of tetany. Persistent hypocalcemia is due to an hungry bone syndrome or organic hypoparathyroidism that should be treated by oral vitamin D and calcium. In secondary HPT, hypocalcemia is early, marked and asymptomatic. Treatment must often be started on the 6th postoperative hour by intravenous calcium infusion, followed by oral vitamin D and calcium. The absence of postoperative hypocalcemia indicate incomplete removal of all abnormal parathyroid tissue. At the third postoperative day, a second cervicotomy may be performed to complete the neck exploration.
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PMID:[Anesthesia and postoperative recovery for parathyroid gland surgery]. 1008 69


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