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Query: UMLS:C0221002 (
primary hyperparathyroidism
)
4,921
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Germ-line mutations of the MEN1 gene were analyzed in five cases of familial and four cases of sporadic
multiple endocrine neoplasia
type 1 (MEN-1), six cases in three independent pedigrees of familial pituitary adenoma without
MEN
-1, and three cases of familial isolated
primary hyperparathyroidism
(FIHP) in Japanese. Eight different types of germ-line mutations in all nine cases of
MEN
-1 were distributed in exons 2, 3, 7, and 10 and intron 7 of the MEN1 gene. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on 11q13 was detected in all nine tumors of these cases with microsatellite analysis. No germ-line mutation of the MEN1 gene was detected in three pedigrees of familial pituitary adenoma and three cases of FIHP. LOH on 11q13 was detected in two cases in one pedigree of familial pituitary adenoma, and one of them showed a heterozygous somatic mutation of the MEN1 gene. No LOH on 11q13 was detected in three cases of FIHP. Based on these, we conclude that the loss of function of menin is etiological for familial or sporadic
MEN
-1, but not for FIHP or most familial pituitary adenoma without
MEN
-1.
...
PMID:Absence of germ-line mutations of the multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) gene in familial pituitary adenoma in contrast to MEN1 in Japanese. 970 85
The aim of this study was to assess the late outcome of patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
and multiple gland enlargement (MGE) treated by conservative surgery. MGE in
primary hyperparathyroidism
is the presence of two or more enlarged glands weighing more than 50 mg. Conservative surgery consists in resecting the grossly enlarged glands without biopsying the normal glands. Some authors have suggested that this approach overlooks minute hyperplasia, leading to late recurrences of hyperparathyroidism; conversely, it may result in the unnecessary resection of grossly enlarged, but not hyperfunctioning, glands. Altogether 1231 patients were operated on for
primary hyperparathyroidism
between 1966 and 1995. Of these patients, 304 (24.9%) had MGE, including 42 cases of
multiple endocrine neoplasia
(
MEN
), 12 familial cases, and 250 seemingly sporadic cases. Two, three, or four glands (or more) were involved in 61.8%, 21.4%, and 16.4% of cases, respectively. During the early postoperative period one patient died and ten were reoperated for persistent hypercalcemia. The pathologic diagnoses were double adenomas (13.5%), hyperplasia (35.8%), association of the two (39.8%), and a normal second gland (10.8%) on light microscopy findings. None of the 30 deaths that occurred during follow-up was related to hyperparathyroidism. Altogether 190 patients (79%) were available for follow-up (average 89.3 months): 90% were normocalcemic, 4.7% hypocalcemic, and 5.2% hypercalcemic. A late iPTH assay was done in 147. PTH was appropriate to the serum calcium level in 84.3% and appropriate to normal calcemia in 91.6% of 132 cases. Conservative surgery is thus an acceptable treatment for MGE in patients with hyperparathyroidism. Few late recurrences occur, for which there are no individual predictive criteria.
...
PMID:Late outcome of 304 consecutive patients with multiple gland enlargement in primary hyperparathyroidism treated by conservative surgery. 959 23
We describe three siblings with hyperparathyroidism due to multiple parathyroid adenomas without evidence of other endocrinological abnormalities. A 22-year-old woman had two parathyroid adenomas complicated by multiple ossifying jaw fibromas. Her sister, aged 29, also suffered from
primary hyperparathyroidism
associated with two parathyroid adenomas one of which was also suspected to be a carcinoma. These two female patients had unusual multiple small uterine polyps, which were diagnosed as adenomyomatous polyps. Their brother, aged 17, had two parathyroid adenomas complicated by urolithiasis. These three patients are characterized by young adult-onset familial isolated hyperparathyroidism due to multiple adenomas with various complications including ossifying jaw fibroma and uterine adenomyomatous polyps. These clinical features are different from those of familial hyperparathyroidism associated with
multiple endocrine neoplasia
.
...
PMID:Familial isolated hyperparathyroidism due to multiple adenomas associated with ossifying jaw fibroma and multiple uterine adenomyomatous polyps. 962 69
Approximately 70 families with familial isolated hyperparathyroidism (FIHP) have been reported. Whether it is a separate entity or a variant of
multiple endocrine neoplasia
type 1 (MEN1 at 11q13) or hyperparathyroidism-jaw tumor (HPT-JT or HRPT2 at 1q21-32) syndrome is not known. We describe here 3 unreported families with familial
primary hyperparathyroidism
and evaluate their clinical, pathological, and genetic profiles. Biochemical and radiological screenings for MEN1 were negative for all families. In 2 families with a total of 10 affected cases and 3 female obligate carriers, there is no evidence of jaw or renal lesions despite careful radiological investigations. In both families the disease was linked to the 1q21-q32 region with the maximum logarithm of the odds (lod) scores of 3.10 and 3.43 for markers D1S222 and D1S249 respectively, at recombination fraction of 0. In 1 family 2 types of parathyroid pathology were found: 3 of chief cell type and 1 of oxyphil/oncocytic cell type. Two chief cell tumors and 1 oxyphil tumor were found to have loss of heterozygosity (LOH) involving loss of the wild-type alleles for chromosome 1q markers. In the third family, with 4 affected siblings, a parathyroid carcinoma and 2 cases of polycystic kidney disease were found. The parathyroid carcinoma also showed loss of heterozygosity in the 1q region. In conclusion, we found that the hyperparathyroidism traits in a subset of FIHP families are linked to the 1q21-32 markers in the HRPT2 region. We describe the spectrum of parathyroid disease in 1q-linked families involving 3 different types of pathology and demonstrate for the first time loss of wild-type alleles in these parathyroid tumors. Taken together, the results suggest that some of the FIHP are a variant of HPT-JT and that the gene involved is a tumor suppressor gene.
...
PMID:Familial isolated hyperparathyroidism maps to the hyperparathyroidism-jaw tumor locus in 1q21-q32 in a subset of families. 962 48
A case of multiple carcinoid tumors of the duodenum accompanied by familial
multiple endocrine neoplasia
is reported. A 46-year-old man with duodenal polyps discovered during a mass screening was followed up for 5 years. In August 1994, a histological examination revealed carcinoid tumors, and he was thus referred to our hospital for surgery. He underwent a parathyroidectomy and cholecystectomy for
primary hyperparathyroidism
and cholecystolithiasis, respectively. The patient's sister had also undergone a parathyroidectomy and distal pancreatectomy for
primary hyperparathyroidism
and insulinoma of the pancreas. In addition, his two children were also followed up for hypercalcemia. A serum examination of the patient revealed high levels of somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide, but normal levels of gastrin and serotonin. In November 1994, a pancreaticoduodenectomy with a D2 lymph node dissection was performed. The macroscopic findings of the resected specimen showed multiple polypoid lesions with delles on the top, measuring 3 to 15 mm in size throughout the duodenum. A microscopic examination revealed the tumor to have infiltrated into the submucosa extensively, and an immunohistochemical analysis also demonstrated the tumor cells to be positive for somatostatin, but not for pancreatic polypeptide. After surgery, the serum level of somatostatin returned to normal but the pancreatic polypeptide remained high. The post-operative course was uneventful, and the patient remains in good health.
...
PMID:Multiple carcinoids of the duodenum accompanied by type I familial multiple endocrine neoplasia. 968 14
Multiple endocrine neoplasia
type 1 (MEN-1) is a well characterized hereditary syndrome with the occurrence of
primary hyperparathyroidism
(HPT) in combination with pancreatic-duodenal endocrine and anterior pituitary tumours. The diagnosis of
MEN
-1, the possible probands, necessitates the recognition of at least two or three lesions classically associated with the syndrome whilst only one of them is required for individuals belonging to established
MEN
-1 kindreds. A distinct feature of
MEN
-1 comprises the multiplicity of organ involvement, the multicentricity of tumours within the affected organs as well as the complex pattern of the clinical signs of these tumours and their sometimes temporarily variable profile of hormone excess. Thorough screening studies have demonstrated that the
MEN
-1 trait is biochemically detectable virtually two decades prior to clinically overt disease. The primary biochemical screening programme for
MEN
-1 includes serum prolactin and insulin growth factor 1 (IGF-1) for pituitary lesions, intact PTH and albumin corrected total serum calcium for the parathyroids and for duodenal/pancreatic tumours serum glucose, insulin, proinsulin, pancreatic polypeptide, glucagon, gastrin and plasma chromogranin A. Furthermore a standardized meal stimulatory test analysing serum polypeptides (PP) and gastrin is recommended. Our current primary screening procedure has yielded about 10% false positives when compared with RFLP data. Pancreatic endocrine tumour diagnosis must be biochemically established since radiology fails to show lesions in half of the patients. Pancreatic involvement in young
MEN
-1 patients is most consistently demonstrated by analysing serum insulin, proinsulin, PP as well as plasma glucagon chromogranin A levels, which have exhibited sensitivities of 56, 67, 37 and 60%, respectively. Serum PP is a non-specific marker of islet cell tumours that should be applied in conjunction with other peptide markers. Elevation of basal serum gastrin generally indicates the presence of advanced pancreatic tumour involvement or duodenal carcinoids. Early diagnosis of pancreatic endocrine tumours in
MEN
-1 is enhanced by the use of a standardized meal stimulation test with measurements of serum PP and gastrin response. This test was the most sensitive test and substantiated the presence of tumour in 75% of individuals whose mean age was 25 years. False-positive stimulation due to the meal test has been found in about 10% of previous investigated individuals. The diagnosis of
MEN
-1 pancreatic tumours is based on biochemical screening alone and it has been substantiated that an unequivocal rise in pancreatic tumour markers precedes radiological detection of these lesions by at least five years.
...
PMID:The ultimate biochemical diagnosis of endocrine pancreatic tumours in MEN-1. 968 45
About 25% of patients with ZES have
MEN
-1. Except for diarrhoea, less frequent in patients with ZES
MEN
-1 than in sporadic ZES, and specific
MEN
-1-related signs, clinical characteristics are similar in both ZES types. Acid output and gastrin level are also similar whether in the basal state or after secretin.
Primary hyperparathyroidism
(pHPT) exists in the majority of ZES
MEN
-1 patients, 30% have pituitary adenoma (prolactinomas for half), 30% adrenal involvement, 25-30% have ECLomas: bronchial and thymic carcinoids have probably been underevaluated. Gastrinomas are multiple predominantly located in the duodenal wall, but also in the pancreas in association with clinically silent endocrine tumours. The spread of the disease metastases to the liver (LM), mediastinum, bones, is evaluated best by Octreoscan. Associated endoscopic ultrasonography evaluates the number, size and anatomical characteristics of gastrinomas. Patients without LM have an excellent prognosis. Surgery never cures ZES, but is necessary in cases of associated life-threatening conditions such as insulinoma. Although the size of the tumour, when located in the pancreas >3 cm, favours metachronous LM occurrence, surgery in our experience has not been able to prevent LM development.
...
PMID:Diagnostic and therapeutic criteria in patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1. 968 47
Primary hyperparathyroidism
is a common endocrine disease that also occurs in a number of inherited disorders, including
multiple endocrine neoplasia
type 1 (MEN1). Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in the MEN1 region on chromosome 11q13 has been found in 30% of sporadic parathyroid tumors, making the recently cloned MEN1 gene a prime candidate for involvement in parathyroid tumorigenesis. Using LOH and single strand conformation analysis, we screened 45 sporadic tumors from 40 patients for alterations involving the MEN1 gene. Thirteen tumors showed LOH at 11q13, and in 6 of these cases, somatic mutation of the MEN1 gene was detected. In tumors without LOH, no mutations were detected. The mutations consisted of 3 small deletions, 1 insertion, and 2 missense mutations that had not been reported in MEN1 patients or parathyroid tumors previously. Using messenger ribonucleic acid in situ hybridization, the expression of the MEN1 gene was studied. There was no difference in expression between normal and tumor tissue. In conclusion, the findings of inactivating mutation in tumors with LOH at 11q13 confirm the role of the MEN1 tumor suppressor gene in a subset of sporadic parathyroid tumors.
...
PMID:Alterations of the MEN1 gene in sporadic parathyroid tumors. 970 20
The elective unilateral approach, sometimes under local anaesthesia, offers many advantages in terms of less invasive and faster surgical approach compared to the conventional surgery under general anaesthesia. Nevertheless this approach is restricted to patients unsuspected of multiglandular disease, free from thyroid disease and for whom localization studies are contributive. Surgery under hypnosedation offers the same advantages and provides the possibility of not only exploring the four glands but also of performing a partial thyroidectomy if needed. In our experience 21 patients underwent a cervicotomy under hypnosedation for
primary hyperparathyroidism
(HPT). No conversion to general anaesthesia was needed; mean operative time was 52 +/- 16 min. In 17 cases, HPT was due to a single adenoma, in 3 cases to hyperplasia (among them a
MEN
-1 case), and in one last case to a double adenoma. The four glands were identified in 85%. With a follow-up running from 4 to 45 months, all patients are cured. Hypnosedation offers the same medical and economic advantages than the unilateral access under local anaesthesia. Moreover indications are not restricted to selected patients.
...
PMID:[Surgery under hypnosedation. A new therapeutic approach to hyperparathyroidism]. 975 83
Multiple endocrine neoplasia
type 2 (MEN 2) is a rare syndrome of medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) with pheochromocytoma and/or
primary hyperparathyroidism
(
PHP
), usually due to multigland hyperplasia. MEN 2 is associated with several RET protooncogene mutations. A 61-year-old woman with a family history of RET-positive MTC presented with a solitary thyroid nodule. Fine-needle aspiration biopsy was suspicious for neoplasm. Biochemical studies revealed basal hypercalcitoninemia (116 pg/mL [normal <26]) and
PHP
(serum calcium, 10.9 mg/dL; intact PTH, 113.2 pg/mL [10.0-65.0]). Pheochromocytoma screening was negative. A provisional diagnosis of MEN 2 was made, but at surgery, a single parathyroid adenoma was resected and frozen sections of several lymph nodes revealed papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC). A total thyroidectomy was performed. Final histological diagnosis was PTC and parathyroid adenoma with no evidence of MTC. Postoperatively, RET mutation testing was positive. The basal calcitonin (CT) fell to 25 pg/mL, but peaked at 935 (normal <105) after pentagastrin infusion, consistent with occult MTC. After radioiodine ablation, CT decreased further. Octreotide scanning was negative. Faced with
PHP
, a thyroid nodule, and a family history of MTC, clinicians tend to diagnose MEN 2. This patient had a single parathyroid adenoma and nonmedullary thyroid cancer, which the literature actually suggests to be an association more frequent than MEN 2. Yet, there remains compelling data in favor of occult MTC, leaving open the possibility of an MEN 2 variant with the rare association of PTC.
...
PMID:Papillary thyroid carcinoma, parathyroid adenoma, and unexplained hypercalcitoninemia: an unusual presentation of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2A? 977 49
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