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)

Primary hyperparathyroidism is a rather frequent pathology characterised by hypersecretion of parathormone (PTH) which is caused by adenomas in 85% of all cases. At clinical onset, the most common symptoms are hypercalcemia-related (pain due to kidney stones, polyuria, gastrointestinal and neurological disorders) while rarer symptoms are due to brown tumors, expansive lesions often found in fibro-cystic osteitis. A case in which the patient showed recurrent mandibular brown tumors as initial clinical symptoms of primary hyperparathyroidism is described. This patient was examined for hypercalcemia, and a tumor mass at the left inferior mandibular branch was found. The patient had undergone surgical removal of a tumor in the left mandibular some years before, which was diagnosed as osteoclastoma. Primary hyperparathyroidism was diagnosed during recovery, and surgical removal of the parathyroid adenoma and mandibular tumor was performed. A histological diagnosis of large cell brown tumor was made. A microscopic observation of brown tumors which are made up of large multinuclear osteoclastic cells can often be confused with other large cell tumors during diagnosis. It is therefore necessary to exclude the presence of hyperparathyroidism with ionised calcium and, in cases of high values, intact PTH (iPTH), before performing a histological diagnosis of a large cell bone tumor. Throughout the course of primary hyperparathyroidism, brown tumors might appear in the absence of other specific symptoms and localize at the level of a single bone segment.
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PMID:[Recurrent brown tumors as initial manifestation of primary hyperparathyroidism. An unusual presentation]. 1108 46

Primary hyperparathyroidism (HPTo) nowadays is most often recognized incidentally in the asymptomatic period as a result of biochemical screening or evaluation of low bone mass. Classical manifestations of the disease are present in about 15-20% of patients. We present the case of a 28-year-old male patient who had been treated for two years for osteoclastoma of the proximal tibia, first by intralesional curettage with cement filling followed by bone grafting, and finally with a reconstructive arthroplasty of the knee joint. The patient had been consulted in different medical centers by at least 14 doctors representing 9 different specialties, but the correct diagnosis of HPTo had not been made, although classic manifestations of the disease had been present for 5-6 years. This suggests that a diagnosis of HPTo is difficult nowadays. Therefore, determination of serum calcium concentration and other markers of calcium and phosphate metabolism should be obligatory in patients with bone lesions.
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PMID:Delayed diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism in a patient with osteoclastoma. 2214 39

To report a rare case of axis brown tumor and to review literature of cervical spine brown tumor. Brown tumor is a rare bone lesion, incidence less than 5% in primary hyperparathyroidism. It is more common in secondary hyperparathyroidism with up to 13% of cases. Brown tumor reactive lesion forms as a result of disturbed bone remodeling due to long standing increase in parathyroid hormones. Cervical spine involvement is extremely rare, can be confused with serous spine lesions. To date, only four cases of cervical spine involvement have been reported. Three were due to secondary hyperparathyroidism. Only one was reported to involve the axis and was due to secondary hyperparathyroidism. This is the first reported case of axis brown tumor due to primary hyperparathyroidism. A case report of brown tumor is presented. A literature review was conducted by a Medline search of reported cases of brown tumor, key words: brown tumor, osteoclastoma and cervical lesions. The resulting papers were reviewed and cervical spine cases were listed then classified according to the level, cause, and management. Only four previous cases involved the cervical spine. Three were caused by secondary hyperparathyroidism and one was by primary hyperparathyroidism which involved the C6. Our case was the first case of C2 involvement of primary hyperparathyroidism and it was managed conservatively. Brown tumor, a rare spinal tumor that presents with high PTH and giant cells, requires a high level of suspicion.
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PMID:Brown tumor of the cervical spines: a case report with literature review. 2570 44