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)

We studied 25-year-old HLA- and blood group-identical male twins who had multiple endocrine neoplasia, type I (MEN I). At the time of initial examination, one twin (case 1) had epigastric pain and diarrhea; he was cushingoid in appearance. Further evaluation revealed primary hyperparathyroidism, Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, Cushing's disease, and hyperprolactinemia. Immunostaining of a resected pituitary specimen demonstrated both prolactin and, to a lesser extent, growth hormone reactivity. The nontumorous adenohypophysis showed corticotropic hyperplasia. In contrast, the other twin (case 2) was asymptomatic. He had only primary hyperparathyroidism and hyperprolactinemia. An invasive pituitary adenoma was resected and showed similar proportions of cells with immunoreactive prolactin and those with growth hormone; no nontumorous gland was available for study. Apparently, factors other than heredity may play a role in the expression of MEN I.
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PMID:Nonidentical expressions of multiple endocrine neoplasia, type I, in identical twins. 287 27

Forty-nine members of 6 families with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN 1) were investigated with a standardized meal stimulation test to detect the presence of pancreatic endocrine tumors. Fifteen age-matched subjects and 4 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism also were studied. Serum pancreatic polypeptide (PP), gastrin, and insulin as well as plasma glucagon and somatostatin concentrations were determined before and during the test meal. Patients with demonstrable pancreatic endocrine tumors had significantly increased mean basal and peak serum PP (P less than 0.001) and gastrin (P less than 0.001) responses to the meal compared with healthy family members and normal subjects. Seven of 12 MEN 1 patients with parathyroid and pituitary disease but no demonstrable pancreatic endocrine tumors had exaggerated PP and/or gastrin responses to the meal; 4 of them developed pancreatic endocrine tumors, detected by abdominal computerized tomography, 0.5-4 yr later. None of the healthy members of the MEN 1 families or the patients with primary hyperparathyroidism had responses different from those of the normal subjects. Our experience with the meal stimulation test indicates that an elevated basal or exaggerated serum PP and/or gastrin response is an earlier sign of pancreatic involvement in the MEN 1 trait than is abdominal computerized tomography.
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PMID:A standardized meal stimulation test of the endocrine pancreas for early detection of pancreatic endocrine tumors in multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 syndrome: five years experience. 288 95

Carotid body tumor is an uncommon tumor of the head and neck. The coexistence of this entity with primary hyperparathyroidism is even more unusual, with only four cases having been previously recorded. This report describes a patient with a left inferior parathyroid adenoma and a right carotid body tumor. A common neuroectodermal origin is proposed as an explanation for the simultaneous occurrence of these tumors. The fact that this may represent yet another variable expression of the multiple endocrine neoplasia syndromes emphasizes the importance of careful endocrine screening in patients with carotid body tumors.
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PMID:Carotid body tumor and hyperparathyroidism. A case report and review of the literature. 288 23

A rise in the serum calcitonin (CT) following provocative testing has facilitated making the diagnosis of occult medullary carcinoma of the thyroid (MCT) or C cell hyperplasia (CCH) in asymptomatic children of kindred with multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) type IIa. Findings were reviewed for seven children varying in age from 3 to 16 years screened at our institution between 1976 and 1986. Three had elevated basal calcitonin (S-CT). Six had significant elevation of calcitonin (delta-CT) after stimulation. Total thyroidectomy was performed in all seven. Five had MCT with bilobar involvement in three. CCH was present in all five. Two patients had no gross, microscopic, or immunohistochemical evidence of MCT or CCH. One of three had an elevated S-CT. The other had a significant delta-CT. All patients have normal postoperative S-CT and delta-CT. Our experience indicates the importance of beginning stimulation tests of affected kindred at less than 3 years of age. It appears, however, that neither elevated S-CT or positive delta-CT are perfect predictors of parafollicular cell pathology. Solitary parathyroid enlargement, second thyroid malignancy, and branchial pouch anomalies may occur with MEN IIa. One patient with MCT had a focus of papillary carcinoma. One patient with primary hyperparathyroidism had a solitary enlarged parathyroid adenoma. Additional findings were the presence of nodules of ectopic thymus in close association with the thyroid gland in three patients.
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PMID:Provocative testing for occult medullary carcinoma of the thyroid: findings in seven children with multiple endocrine neoplasia type IIa. 288 76

In a 14-years period (1970-1984) eight-three patients were operated on for primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) at the University Hospital of Erlangen. Special attention was paid to associated diseases, symptoms, preoperative diagnostic parameters were serum calcium, parathyroid hormone in venous blood, cyclic AMP in 24 h-urine. In 15.7% only borderline increased serum calcium values were measured. Ulcer incidence in pHPT was 19% as compared with approx. 7% in the general population. There was no increased incidence of pancreatitis in pHPT. The possibility of an association of pHPT with the Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia (MEN) syndrome was emphasized and measures of early diagnosis proposed.
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PMID:[Primary hyperparathyroidism--experiences with concomitant diseases, symptoms, preoperative diagnosis and surgical procedure over a period of 14 years]. 288 2

The serum concentrations of calcium, albumin and parathyroid hormone (PTH) and the plasma levels of ionized calcium were determined in 124 healthy subjects, 89 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT), 23 of whom had the syndrome of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN-1) and 43 patients who had hypercalcaemia of other causes than HPT (non-HPT), in most cases due to widespread malignancies. The total serum calcium was corrected for the serum albumin concentration (CaM). Healthy females over the age of 50 had higher CaM, than younger females and the women of all ages also had, higher serum PTH levels than males. For all study groups both the intra- and inter-diurnal variations were small for all the studied variables. Discriminant function and optimal discriminatory limits were calculated with the help of computer programs. A consideration of all the individuals in the discriminant analysis, revealed that measurements of CaM alone separated most HPT patients both from the healthy subjects and from the non-HPT patients. However, when only those who had borderline values (defined as CaM between 2.45 and 2.75 mmol/l) were included it turned out that measurements of ionized calcium markedly improved the delineation of mild HPT from the healthy subjects and that, in addition, PTH measurements helped to exclude those with non-HPT hypercalcaemia. The optimal discriminatory levels of serum calcium were calculated as the levels which caused the minimum loss in terms of misclassification when attention was paid to the relative importance of false positive to false negative classifications and to the prevalence of HPT. The optimal discriminatory level for serum calcium for a weighting ratio between false positive to false negative of 1:1, and a prevalence of HPT of 1%, was calculated to be 2.68 mmol/l and for a prevalence of 50% 2.56 mmol/l. In the latter situation a weighting ratio of 10:1 for false positive to false negative gave a level of 2.63 mmol/l while a weighting ratio of 1:10 corresponded to an optimal discriminatory level of 2.47 mmol/l.
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PMID:Optimal discrimination of mild hyperparathyroidism with total serum calcium, ionized calcium and parathyroid hormone measurements. 288 82

This study evaluates prospectively the effect of parathyroidectomy on basal acid output (BAO), maximal acid output (MAO), fasting serum gastrin, secretin-stimulated serum gastrin, and sensitivity to antisecretory medication in 10 consecutive patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (PHP), Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES), and multiple endocrine neoplasia type I (MEN-I). After parathyroidectomy, 9 of 10 patients remained normocalcemic, and each had a lower BAO; 6 of 9 no longer had gastric acid hypersecretion (less than 15 mEq/hr). Seven of 9 normocalcemic patients had a lower MAO, and a decrease in fasting serum gastrin. Two patients showed no evidence of ZES, a normal BAO, normal fasting serum gastrin concentration, and a negative secretin response after parathyroidectomy. Parathyroidectomy also reduced the dose of histamine H2-receptor antagonist required to control gastric acid secretion in 60% of patients. After successful parathyroidectomy three patients were studied for drug sensitivity, and each had greater acid inhibition with a given dose of histamine H2-receptor antagonist than preoperatively. One patient remained hypercalcemic after surgery and had no change in BAO, MAO, or gastrin. All patients with postoperative normocalcemia will have a lower BAO, 80% a lower MAO, 80% a decreased fasting serum gastrin, and 33% a negative secretin test. Antisecretory medication dose can be reduced because patients have reduced BAO and increased sensitivity to histamine H2-receptor antagonist. The study supports parathyroidectomy as the initial surgical procedure of choice in patients with PHP, ZES, and MEN-I.
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PMID:Effect of parathyroidectomy in patients with hyperparathyroidism, Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, and multiple endocrine neoplasia type I: a prospective study. 289 Dec 1

A case of multiple endocrine neoplasia type I (MEN I) consisting of Cushing's disease, primary hyperparathyroidism, and insulin-glucagonoma is described. This condition was treated successfully by transsphenoidal pituitary adenomectomy, subtotal parathyroidectomy, and enucleation of pancreatic tumors. Histologic features showed a basophilic adenoma in the pituitary, chief cell hyperplasia in the parathyroid, and islet cell adenomas in the pancreas. The rarity of multiple endocrine hyperfunctioning states and the pathophysiology created by the combination of these three diseases in this patient are of interest.
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PMID:Multiple endocrine neoplasia type I with Cushing's disease, primary hyperparathyroidism, and insulin-glucagonoma. 289 61

Reoperation for persistent or recurrent primary hyperparathyroidism immediately connotes a complex clinical management problem. Successful cure of hypercalcemia is less frequent whereas complications are more common compared to initial explorations. Of 212 patients operated on at the Mayo Clinic from 1978 through 1986, 189 (89%) were cured. Sporadic disease, multiple endocrine neoplasia, and familial hyperparathyroidism were found in 183 (87%), 20 (9%), and 9 (4%) patients, respectively. Prior to the most recent reoperation, these patients had undergone from one to five operations. Preoperative localization examinations were performed in 192 patients (91%). Cervical high-resolution, real-time ultrasonography, computed tomography, and thallium-technetium scintigraphy had sensitivity rates of 87%, 56%, and 71%, respectively. When the tumor was localized preoperatively, the operative time and cost were significantly reduced compared to nonlocalized tumors. Cervical reexploration only was required in 154 (72%), combined cervical and mediastinal exploration occurred in 46 (22%), and mediastinal exploration only was performed in 12 (6%). There was no perioperative mortality; permanent hypoparathyroidism developed in 33 patients (16%), and six patients (2.9%) suffered permanent unilateral vocal cord paralysis. Anatomically, the most frequent site to find a missed parathyroid adenoma was in the normal location. The large majority of these glands were removed through a cervical incision although, on occasion, they were retracted from the anterior superior mediastinum or the low tracheoesophageal space. These data confirm that reoperative parathyroid surgery can be performed safely, with a rather high degree of success, but too-frequently results in a lifetime morbidity of hypoparathyroidism.
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PMID:Reoperative parathyroid surgery. 290 May 81

Management of patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia type I (Wermer's syndrome) who have concurrent hypercalcemia and hypergastrinemia is controversial. The usual therapeutic approach has been to perform parathyroidectomy first before surgery for ulcer disease in an effort to decrease serum calcium concentration and presumably remove one of the stimuli for both gastrin and gastric acid secretion. We present the history of a 48-year-old man with primary hyperparathyroidism and Zollinger-Ellison syndrome who underwent acid secretory studies and secretin stimulation tests before and after parathyroidectomy. We also studied the effect of calcium channel blockade on gastrin and gastric acid secretion, since calcium influx into endocrine cells, such as the gastrinoma cell, is thought to be critical in hormone secretion. Although parathyroidectomy reduced serum calcium and parathormone levels to normal, basal serum gastrin concentration and basal acid output remained unchanged. The peak rise in serum gastrin concentration after secretin injection was less after parathyroidectomy than before parathyroidectomy but was still abnormal. During administration of verapamil, a calcium channel antagonist, no change was seen in the serum gastrin concentration, secretin test response, or acid secretion. Basal acid output was 45.4 mmol/hr before parathyroidectomy or verapamil and 54.0 and 50.4 mmol/hr after parathyroidectomy or verapamil, respectively. In contrast, a small but significant decrease (p less than 0.05) in serum parathormone concentration occurred during treatment with verapamil, an observation that to the best of our knowledge has not been previously reported in humans.
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PMID:Lack of effect of parathyroidectomy or calcium channel blockade on serum gastrin concentration and gastric acid secretion in a patient with hyperparathyroidism and Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 379 19


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