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Query: UMLS:C0221002 (
primary hyperparathyroidism
)
4,921
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Primary hyperparathyroidism
has been increasingly diagnosed among whites since the advent of the biochemical autoanalyzer. However, the condition remains uncommon among Orientals. Our experience with 31 patients at the Queen Mary Hospital, University of Hong Kong, in the periods before and after we began to use the biochemical autoanalyzer was reviewed. The prevalence of
primary hyperparathyroidism
rose slightly from 3.1 to 3.7 per 100,000 hospital population. In both periods skeletal manifestation was the major clinical presentation, followed by hypercalcemic symptoms and
urologic disease
. Asymptomatic hypercalcemia occurred in three of 31 patients despite the use of the biochemical autoanalyzer. Preoperative localization was carried out in 27 patients and was helpful in nine (33.3%) of them. The surgeon explored all four parathyroids, removed the diseased gland(s), and examined a biopsy specimen of one normal-appearing gland. There were 27 adenomas, two carcinomas, one four-gland hyperplasia, and one sarcoidosis. Twenty-eight patients had transient hypocalcemia after parathyroidectomy and required calcium supplements for variable periods. Before and after we began to use the biochemical autoanalyzer, there was minimal change in the prevalence and clinical pattern of
primary hyperparathyroidism
seen in our hospital. In our experience, successful parathyroidectomy depends more on the surgeon's operative technique than on preoperative localization.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism: its clinical pattern and results of surgical treatment in Hong Kong Chinese. 336 91
Nephrolithiasis is a common
urological disease
and could be secondary to
primary hyperparathyroidism
(PHPT). PHPT is traditionally characterised with hypercalcaemia. Recently, a normocalcemic PHPT has been officially recognised at the International Workshops. Regarding this new phenotype, nephrolithiasis is frequently found in studies that evaluate low bone mass. However, until now, no study on aetiology of nephrolithiasis considered normocalcemic PHPT. Hypercalciuria related to PHPT is considered as an important risk factor of stone formation in hypercalcemic PHPT, but the precise relationships between hypercalcemic PHPT and nephrolithiasis and between normocalcemic PHPT and nephrolithiasis remain unclear. In patients with hypercalcemic PHPT, after a surgical cure of PHPT, the renal calcium excretion and stone recurrence rate reduce but remain higher above health controls. This finding implies that abnormalities not caused by PHPT also probably affect stone formation. According to the new guideline, the presence of stones indicates the need for parathyroidectomy in patients with either hypercalcemic or normocalcemic PHPT unless contraindications exist. Patients with contraindications for parathyroidectomy or those who do not want to receive parathyroidectomy should be monitored for signs of disease progression and given of medical management. Moreover, due to decreased but significantly higher frequency of nephrolithiasis above those of healthy controls, patients with nephrolithiasis associated with PHPT after parathyroidectomy still should be motivated to explore strategies to prevent stone occurrence.
...
PMID:Current opinions on nephrolithiasis associated with primary hyperparathyroidism. 2935 Feb 43