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Query: UMLS:C0221002 (
primary hyperparathyroidism
)
4,921
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Because 80% of patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
have a single adenoma and because most adenomas are now visualized by ultrasonography, we have attempted to remove these suspected single adenomas under local
anesthesia
with intra-operative monitoring of urinary cAMP (UcAMP) and 1-84 parathyroid hormone (PTH) serum levels. In the last 2 years, 45 patients (mean age 65 years) with
primary hyperparathyroidism
underwent surgery with local
anesthesia
when a single adenoma was strongly suspected by ultrasonography. Patients with equivocal or misleading ultrasonography, e.g., those with associated thyroid or multiglandular pathology and those who were non-cooperative, were excluded from this procedure. UcAMP and 1-84 PTH were determined prior to the incision, at the time of removal of the adenoma, and at regular intervals until 120 minutes after the operation. Results were available 45 min to 60 min after sampling for PTH and 60 min to 80 min for UcAMP. Forty-two adenomas were removed through a 2 cm to 3 cm skin incision in a mean time of 25 minutes, with no adverse effect, no morbidity, and minimal discomfort. The 42 patients were normocalcaemic on follow-up. The monitorings always predicted the success of the operation. In the 3 remaining patients, because the monitorings remained elevated at the end of the procedure, the patients underwent classical bilateral neck dissection under general
anesthesia
. This new approach can be safely accomplished with short operative time and hospital stay. The absence of general
anesthesia
is reassuring for the patients who are reluctant to undergo general
anesthesia
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Parathyroid adenomectomy under local anesthesia with intra-operative monitoring of UcAMP and/or 1-84 PTH. 132 62
Vecuronium-induced neuromuscular blockade was evaluated in two patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
and in a patient with hypoparathyroidism. A 39 year old male with typical
primary hyperparathyroidism
was scheduled for surgical removal of the parathyroid adenoma. Serum levels of calcium and ionized calcium were 15.0 mg.dl-1 and 1.95 mmol.l-1, respectively. A 44 year old female suffering from
primary hyperparathyroidism
was also scheduled for surgical removal of the adenoma. Serum levels of calcium and ionized calcium were 12.5 mg.dl-1 and 1.51 mmol.l-1, respectively. A 63 year old male, suffering from postoperative secondary hypoparathyroidism and treated with calcium, was scheduled for surgical removal of the recurrent pharyngeal cancer. Serum levels of calcium and ionized calcium were 9.0 mg.dl-1 and 1.15 mmol.l-1, respectively.
Anesthesia
was induced with thiamylal 4-5 mg.kg-1 and vecuronium 0.08 mg.kg-1 and was maintained with 70% nitrous oxide in oxygen and fentanyl in all three patients. Neuromuscular blockade following the administration of vecuronium was measured by a big toe abduction evoked by supramaximal stimulation of the tibial nerve (Myograph 2000, Biometer, Denmark). In order to evaluate the effect of serum calcium level on vecuronium neuromuscular blockade, ten patients with normal serum levels of calcium, were examined in the same fashion. In only one patient with hyperparathyroidism, whose serum calcium was 15.0 mg.dl-1, the onset and the duration of vecuronium were later and shorter than those of other patients with normal serum levels of calcium. In conclusion, we should pay attention to the antagonistic responses to vecuronium in patients with severely high levels of serum calcium.
...
PMID:[Vecuronium-induced neuromuscular blockade in two patients with hyperparathyroidism and a patient with hypoparathyroidism]. 134 75
Patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
are often elderly with cardiovascular disease and in some an operation might be hazardous owing to anaesthetic complications. A technique for operation for
primary hyperparathyroidism
under local
anaesthesia
is described. The method uses a unilateral approach. Seventeen consecutive patients operated on under local
anaesthesia
were compared with a group of 15 patients undergoing surgery under general
anaesthesia
. Normocalcaemia was achieved in 14 patients in each group. There was no difference in the extent of pain or the overall well-being between the two groups as determined by a visual analogue scale. Patients receiving local
anaesthesia
, however, experienced significantly less nausea after operation (P < 0.01). There was more fluctuation in blood pressure and heart rate in the general
anaesthesia
group compared with the other group. Surgery for
primary hyperparathyroidism
can be performed safely under local
anaesthesia
, and could be offered to patients if general
anaesthesia
were not suitable or involved an increased perioperative risk. It should not be recommended for routine use in patients who are fit for general
anaesthesia
.
...
PMID:Surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism performed under local anaesthesia. 142 61
Unilateral neck exploration for
primary hyperparathyroidism
(pHPT) of old and high risk patients can be safely performed under local
anesthesia
, provided there is a correct preoperative side localization of the enlarged parathyroid gland. We performed large vein sampling and measured intact parathyroid hormones (PTH) with a new, highly sensitive immunoradiometric assay. The method was used before operation in 20 patients with pHPT. A unilateral positive gradient of serum PTH levels was obtained in 15 patients. At surgery, 13 of these (87%) proved to be correct, i.e., the adenoma was localized on the same side. Thus, the technique correctly lateralized the parathyroid adenoma in 65% of the patients. We conclude that large vein sampling with measurement of intact PTH is a potentially useful investigation for preoperative side localization of parathyroid adenomas in pHPT patients scheduled for unilateral surgery under local
anesthesia
. However, prior to routine bilateral neck exploration large vein sampling is not justified.
...
PMID:Large vein sampling for intact parathyroid hormone in preoperative localization of enlarged parathyroid glands. 144 74
Primary hyperparathyroidism
caused by an adenoma that has been identified and localized by ultrasonography can be treated through a limited approach route, under local
anaesthesia
, provided the effect of excision is controlled by a perioperative assay of urinary cAMP or, preferably, of plasma parathormone level, and provided the contra-indications of this method are respected. Thirty-three out of 35 patients have been successfully operated upon by this method. In case of failure confirmed by laboratory tests, local
anaesthesia
was only a prelude to cervicotomy under general
anaesthesia
.
...
PMID:[Excision under local anesthesia of parathyroid adenomas. Criteria of selection and control of effectiveness. 35 cases]. 166 78
The generalized use of phosphocalcic biological assays makes the discovery of sporadic
primary hyperparathyroidism
increasingly common. In 1989-1990, first-intention surgery was performed in 26 female patients. In all cases, an exploratory cervicotomy under cervical peridural
anesthesia
allowed discovering and treating a parathyroid lesion: adenoma, asymmetric or symmetric hyperplasia, cancer. We discuss: the circumstances of the clinical diagnosis and the biological criteria, the timeliness of preoperative radiological assessment, the surgical strategy advocated. In more than 90% of all cases, a cervicotomy for the exploration of all areas of parathyroid migration should allow curing
primary hyperparathyroidism
.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic and surgical strategy in sporadic primary hyperparathyroidism]. 178 13
We review the
anesthesia
used on patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
from 1980-1989. As the first choice, nearly two thirds of the operations were performed under cervical epidural block, and about 90% of these obtained satisfactory results. Injury of the spinal cord and nerve root could be avoided by accurate insertion of the epidural needle. Respiratory depression might also be minimized with an alert perioperative course of 5 ml 0.8-1.33% lidocaine as the initial dose followed by 6-8 ml for maintenance. For complicated cases, such as those who had undergone previous cervical operations or were suspected of having ectopic parathyroidomas, general
anesthesia
was carried out instead.
...
PMID:Anesthesia for primary hyperparathyroidism. 180 73
In 50 patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
, investigation before initial neck exploration included ultrasonography, computed tomography and 99technetium-201thallium subtraction scintigraphy. The sensitivity for correct preoperative localization was 50%, 54% and 56%, respectively. There was marked inter-observer variation in assessment of ultrasonography and computed tomography, while scintigrams were evaluated by only one person. The scintigraphic sensitivity increased with size of the glands. In cases where correct preoperative localization permitted unilateral parathyroidectomy, the time for surgery and
anesthesia
was significantly reduced. A cost-benefit analysis, however, revealed that the financial saving from this time reduction was outweighed by the cost of the localization procedures. The authors conclude that investigations for definition of enlarged parathyroid glands are not indicated prior to unilateral parathyroidectomy.
...
PMID:Preoperative localization in unilateral parathyroid surgery. A cost-benefit study on ultrasound, computed tomography and scintigraphy. 210 24
A total of 54 patients underwent surgical exploration for
primary hyperparathyroidism
from 1980 to 1988. Beginning in November 1984 nearly all patients were evaluated with preoperative radionuclide and ultrasound imaging studies. Ultrasound correctly localized 76% of the adenomas removed at surgery, whereas the success rate with radionuclide imaging was 74%. Localization of hyperplastic glands was less successful with the use of either technique. Correct preoperative localization studies in cases of single adenoma reduced the operative time an average of 32 minutes when compared with those cases with no localization studies. Cost-effectiveness was studied based on current charges for operating room time,
anesthesia
, and the preoperative localization studies. An average cost savings of $124 per case was achieved when results of both localization studies were correct. These localization studies are quick, noninvasive, relatively inexpensive, and associated with no morbidity. Because it is possible to reduce operative time and overall costs, we recommend that radionuclide and ultrasound studies be routinely used in patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
.
...
PMID:Accuracy and cost-effectiveness of preoperative isotope and ultrasound imaging in primary hyperparathyroidism. 249 82
From October 1981 to the end of 1984, 13 patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
(PHPT) and 17 with secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) received fresh autografts of diseased parathyroid tissue into their subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue. Because of previous surgery to treat hyperparathyroidism (HPT) (23%), concomitant thyroid surgery (26%), and a high proportion of multiglandular disease (73%), the patients were at high risk for HPT. During the follow-up period, hypercalcemia was diagnosed in five patients and successfully treated in four: by graft excision in two patients, by excision of a fourth gland from the neck in one patient, and with prednisolone in a patient with sarcoidosis. At follow-up (an average of 30 months after grafting), one patient had HPT and 29 others were euparathyroid. Parathyroid tissue can survive and function in adipose tissue, as was demonstrated by normocalcemia in 14 patients (whose only probable remaining parathyroid tissue had been transplanted into fat), by the demonstration that graft-dependent hypercalcemia could be eliminated by excision of the transplant, and by the demonstration of viable parathyroid tissue by microscopic examination of excised grafts. Autotransplantation of diseased parathyroid tissue into fat is simple and reliable. In cases of recurrent HPT, all or a portion of the graft can be removed while the patient is under local
anaesthesia
. If infiltrating growth occurs, broad excisions can be performed without sacrificing vital structures.
...
PMID:Autotransplantation of diseased parathyroid glands into subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue. 357 47
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