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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
(PHPT) was the most likely diagnosis in 68 non-thiazide-treated patients with hypercalcaemia detected in a health screening. The group comprised 55 females and 13 males, with a mean age of 55.0 +/- 0.7 (S.E.M.) years. On a pair basis these patients (the observation group) were compared with a series of 68 age- and sex-matched normocalcaemic subjects (the control group) selected from the health screening register. Renal calcui and reduced creatinine clearance were encountered less frequently in the observation group than in many reports of hospitalized patients with PHPT. Compared with the control group, the observation group comprised a greater number of subjects with renal calculi (usually multiple and bilateral),
constipation
, mental depression and reduced creatinine clearance. The ECG Q-T interval was shorter in the observation group than in the control group. No differences were found with respect to the occurrence of gastritis and/or peptic ulcer, poly-dipsia, polyuria and general muscle weakness. On the basis of this and a previous study it was concluded that at least 3% of the 15903 subjects participating in the health screening suffered from "asymptomatic" hypercalcaemia and most probably from "asymptomatic" PHPT.
...
PMID:Clinical and laboratory findings in subjects with hypercalcaemia. A study including cases with primary hyperparathyroidism detected in a health screening. 98 6
The introduction of multiphasic screening and the development of sensitive parathormone assays have changed the demography and clinical symptomatology of patients presenting with
primary hyperparathyroidism
. This retrospective review includes 158 patients operated on for
primary hyperparathyroidism
at the Medical College of Georgia from 1973-1987. Compared to the 46 patients managed prior to 1973, the frequency of subclinical hyperparathyroidism has increased from 46% to 64%. The median patient age has increased from 50 to 59 years. Recognition of
primary hyperparathyroidism
in a more geriatric population modifies indications for surgical intervention in subclinical disease. Osteoporosis, myalgias, fatigue, arthralgias, memory loss, or
constipation
occurred in 50% of patients. These complaints are frequent in normocalcemic elderly people. They represent disease, not normal aging. Their exacerbation by hypercalcemia should not go uncorrected if neck exploration can be tolerated by the patient.
...
PMID:The changing face of primary hyperparathyroidism. 143 43
Several recent articles question whether patients with asymptomatic hyperparathyroidism and minimal hypercalcemia should be treated by parathyroidectomy. We therefore reviewed our experience in 103 consecutive patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
who were treated by parathyroidectomy to determine, first, how many of these patients had asymptomatic or symptomatic hyperparathyroidism, and second, did these patients benefit from parathyroidectomy? We also analyzed the safety of parathyroidectomy in 426 consecutive patients, including 79 who required reoperation for hyperparathyroidism, specifically looking for complications and the outcome of these procedures. Our study documents the following: (1) only 2 of 103 (2%) patients referred for parathyroidectomy had "true" asymptomatic hyperparathyroidism; (2) only symptoms of fatigue, bone pain, and weight loss correlated with the degree of hypercalcemia, whereas muscular weakness, psychiatric symptoms, nocturia, polyuria, recent memory loss,
constipation
, and nephrolithiasis did not; (3) only 1 of 15 patients who were referred as asymptomatic were truly asymptomatic after more thorough questioning, and all 14 improved following parathyroidectomy; (4) 81% of the patients who were referred with symptoms improved following parathyroidectomy; and (5) permanent complications occurred in only 4 patients. All but 1 had reoperations for persistent or recurrent hyperparathyroidism (3 vocal cord paralyses and 1 hypoparathyroidism requiring autotransplantation of cryopreserved parathyroid tissue). There was 1 death of an 84-year-old woman with hypercalcemic crisis. Thus, most patients with hyperparathyroidism are symptomatic and benefit symptomatically and metabolically from parathyroidectomy, which is a safe operation.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and management of asymptomatic hyperparathyroidism: safety, efficacy, and deficiencies in our knowledge. 176 65
Primary hyperparathyroidism
was thought 30 years ago to be a rare disease, and the diagnosis was most often made in patients presenting with either bone disease or kidney stones. Today the minority of patients with hyperparathyroidism present with such symptoms, a fact accounted for by the introduction into general medical practice three decades ago of laboratory technology for efficiently determining the serum concentrations of various blood minerals, including calcium. Hypercalcemia was detected more frequently, and it was realized that most patients with hyperparathyroidism either had minor symptoms, such as
constipation
, polyuria, tiredness, and muscle weakness, or they were "asymptomatic" and indistinguishable from normal subjects. It was thought that
primary hyperparathyroidism
was a progressive disease and that sooner or later all patients would become symptomatic and require parathyroidectomy. Since this operation was curative in a high percentage of cases, it was recommended for virtually all patients once the diagnosis was established. In this contribution the long-term benefits of parathyroidectomy in patients with and without symptoms from
primary hyperparathyroidism
are reviewed. It is concluded that a multicenter prospective randomized trial is needed to resolve the indications for operative and nonoperative management of patients with this disease.
...
PMID:Surgical therapy of patients with primary hyperparathyroidism: long-term benefits. 176 66
Surgical treatment of hyperparathyroidism is often withheld from elderly patients out of concern about operative morbidity and mortality. We reviewed the case records of 81 patients over the age of 65 who underwent neck exploration for
primary hyperparathyroidism
at the University of Michigan Medical Center during the past 10 years. The most common presenting symptoms were lethargy (62%), neurological complaints (44%), and
constipation
(42%). Less common were histories of peptic ulcer disease (30%) and renal lithiasis (25%). Delay from time of diagnosis to operation averaged 33 weeks. Seventy-seven percent had adenomas, of which 9% were multiple. Average postoperative hospital stay was 7.1 days, ranging from 3 to 22 days. There was no mortality. We believe that neck exploration for
primary hyperparathyroidism
can be safely performed in elderly patients and should not be delayed or withheld merely on the basis of advanced age.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of primary hyperparathyroidism in elderly patients. 360 20
Two hundred and eighty-nine patients operated on for
primary hyperparathyroidism
(PHPT) in the years 1956-79 have been followed up for a mean period of 5 years. The aim of the study was to investigate the symptomatology of PHPT and the disappearance of the symptoms after operative treatment. Of the presenting symptoms hypercalcaemic crisis and cystic bone changes were cured, and none of the patients with pancreatitis as presenting symptom had a recurrence. In the renal stone group, 10% of the patients had recurring stones during the follow-up period. The presenting symptom disappeared in 84% of the patients. Thirty-five% of the patients had no presenting symptom and were classified as "asymptomatic", though, on questioning, most of them had various symptoms which disappeared postoperatively. Malaise, fatigue and muscular weakness disappeared in 79% of the patients, upper abdominal pains in 66%,
constipation
in 63%, pains in the extremities in 51% depression in 65%. Hypertension increased by 28% during the follow-up period; only three of the 90 patients with hypertension has discontinued antihypertensive treatment postoperatively. During the follow-up study, 6% of the patients were hypercalcaemic, though the serum calcium was only slightly elevated in almost all of these patients (mean +/- SD 2.75 +/- 0.09 mmol/l) and most of them had the multiglandular form of PHPT. The renal function did not deteriorate as much as was expected on the basis of earlier reports; only two patients had a serum creatinine over 500 mumol/l.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Long-term effect of surgical treatment on the symptoms of primary hyperparathyroidism. 407 2
Clinical and biochemical evidence of
primary hyperparathyroidism
(prim. HPT) is reported in an infant with hypotonia, feeding problems and
constipation
from birth. Following a partial parathyroidectomy at the age of 12 months, the clinical condition improved. In her sister, mother and three other maternal relatives a familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia (FHH) was subsequently demonstrated. All were clinically healthy in spite of increased total and ionized serum calcium, normal serum parathyroid hormone concentration, low urinary calcium excretion and normal renal excretion of cyclic AMP. Similar findings appeared in our patient after parathyroidectomy. An autosomal dominant inheritance of FHH is suggested. It is thus demonstrated, that a mother with FHH may give birth to healthy children with FHH as well as to infants with prim. HPT associated with FHH.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism in infancy associated with familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia. 631 30
Primary hyperparathyroidism
was studied in a well-defined geriatric population of 1129 individuals during a three-month interval.
Primary hyperparathyroidism
was diagnosed in 1.5%. The diagnosis was based on a morphologic and biochemic basis. From clinical material consisting of 400 patients treated surgically for
primary hyperparathyroidism
during a ten-year period, 158 patients (38%) above the age of 64 were studied. At the preoperative evaluation, neuromuscular symptoms were present in 80%, renal insufficiency and kidney stones in each 16%,
constipation
and/or anorexia in 38%. Ten per cent were considered asymptomatic. In 80% the
primary hyperparathyroidism
was caused by a solitary adenoma. Ninety-four per cent became normocalcemic following the operation. Consistent hypocalcemia requiring vitamin-D treatment occurred in 3%, and 2% had a persisting hypercalcemia or later recurrence. The therapeutic effect on the neuromuscular symptoms,
constipation
, anorexia, and renal stone formation was considered good or fair in most of the cases.
Primary hyperparathyroidism
in the elderly occurs with a high prevalence. It can be treated successfully by surgical therapy with a low cost of morbidity, mortality, and medical care.
...
PMID:Hyperparathyroidism in the elderly. 660 Jun
In a well-defined geriatric population the prevalence of
primary hyperparathyroidism
was 1.5%. From a clinical material consisting of 400 patients treated surgically for
primary hyperparathyroidism
during a 10-year period 158 patients (38%) above the age of 64 were studied. Neuromuscular symptoms were present in 80%, renal insufficiency or kidney stones in each 16%,
constipation
and/or anorexia in 38%. 10% were considered clinically asymptomatic. In 80% the
primary hyperparathyroidism
was caused by a solitary adenoma. Normocalcaemia was achieved in 94%. Hypocalcaemia requiring vitamin D treatment occurred in 3%, and in 2% hypercalcaemia persisted or recurred. All of these had multiglandular parathyroid disease. The therapeutic effect of the surgical treatment was considered good or fair in most of the cases. No mortality occurred.
Primary hyperparathyroidism
occurs with a high prevalence in the elderly. It can be treated successfully by surgical therapy with a low cost of morbidity, mortality and medical care.
...
PMID:Hyperparathyroidism in the old age. 662 11
To determine the frequency of gastrointestinal symptoms in
primary hyperparathyroidism
, we retrospectively analyzed 100 consecutive patients seen at Emory University Hospital from Jan 1, 1977 through March 1, 1979. At the time of diagnosis, 28 patients complained of nausea, 19 of vomiting, 29 of abdominal pain, and 33 of
constipation
. One patient presented with acute pancreatitis and 14 had ulcer disease (two gastric and 12 duodenal ulcers). Hypercalcemia increases gastric acid secretion and may account for associated ulcer disease and the ulcer-like pain in
primary hyperparathyroidism
. The mechanisms causing the other gastrointestinal symptoms in hypercalcemia remain to be elucidated. These symptoms abate on correction of hyperparathyroidism.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism and the gastrointestinal tract. 746 39
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