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)

The authors studied the presence of visceral calcification as evidenced by the visceral uptake of bone-seeking radionuclides during the course of a bone scan among 22 patients with terminal renal failure maintained on dialysis, nine patients with hypercalcemia secondary to malignancy, and nine patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. Uptake by the lungs or stomach was observed in 11 renal failure patients (50%) and in four of those with malignancy and hypercalcemia (44%). None of the patients with primary hyperparathyroidism had evidence of visceral calcification. The serum CaXP product was significantly higher among those with visceral calcification than those without. The results of this study indicate that a CaXP product of 60 represents the saturation product of calcium phosphate in serum above which spontaneous precipitation of this salt may occur in such viscera as stomach and lungs.
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PMID:Visceral calcification and the CaXP product. 71 4

Tthe findings of 150 patients with proven primary hyperparathyroidism are reported. The purpose of the analysis was to find differences between the various clinical manifestations of the disease. Furthermore the occurrence of acute hyperparathyroid crisis in our series as well as in the literature are described. 65.8% of the patients were females, 34.2% were males. The leading symptom in 98 patients (group I) were kidney stones and in 23 patients (group II) cystic bone disease. Both manifestations of the disease occurred in only 7 patients (group III) and no symptoms related to the kidneys or to the bones occurred in 24 patients (group IV). Because of the difference of the clinical manifestations the additional data were analyzed for each group separately and compared with each other. There was no difference in the mean serum calcium levels for all four groups, however, patients of group I were on the average younger, the duration of the disease was longer and the weight of the parathyroid adenoma was lower compared to the other three groups. Data are presented regarding calcium excretion, phosphate clearance and tubular reabsorption of phosphate for each group. At operation single or multiple adenoma formation was present in 133 patients, whereas diffuse hyperplasia was found in 17 and carcinoma in 2 other patients. 46 of the adenomas were found in atypical anatomical localisation. This observation is responsible for the many unsuccessful or second explorations of the neck. The weight of the adenomas varied between 0.1 and 23.5 g. The most difficult diagnosis was that of diffuse hyperplasia. The success of the surgical intervention was usually established in over 80% of the cases within 24 to 48 hours after the operation with a significant fall of serum calcium. There is still no definite explanation for the variability of the clinical manifestations of primary hyperparathyroidism. Parathyroid hormone determinations on larger numbers of patients are not yet published. The assumption, that different hormones or peptide fragments are responsible for the different action on bone and kidney is discussed. In our series of 152 patients acute hyperparathyroid crisis occurred eight times. Our findings are compared to the other well documented cases in the literature. Main symptoms were nausea, vomiting abdominal pain and different states of cerebral dysfunction. Most of the patients had calcium levels over 16 mg/100 ml. Partial renal insufficiency with elevated blood urea and phosphate retention was found in ov er 50% of the cases. Overall mortality of all cases with acute parathyroid crisis is 52.5%. The pathogenesis of acute hyperparathyroidism and the implications of high calcium levels are discussed. According to our own experience hypercalcemia can be controlled with an intensive therapeutic program and emergency operation for acute parathyroid crisis is no longer necessary.
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PMID:[Primary hyperparathyroidism. An analysis of 152 patients with special references to acute life threatening complications (acute hyperparathyroidism)]. 79 28

A 25-year-old white woman with sporadic hypophosphatemic rickets presented with a 7 year history of chronic mild hypercalcemia, osteitis fibrosa cystic and hypercalcemic nephropathy. Serum immunoreactive parathyroid hormone was elevated by greater than 100-fold and a 3.5 g parathyroid tumor was found at operation. Survey of the literature reveals that of 9 previous cases in which hypercalcemic hyperparathyroidism occurred in association with hypophosphatemic rickets, only two had classical x-linked familial hypophosphatemic rickets. It appears more than likely that this unusual combination of skeletal diseases represents the chance occurrence of primary hyperparathyroidism in patients with underlying x-linked familial hypophosphatemic rickets rather than a complication of phosphate therapy.
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PMID:Hypercalcemic hyperparathyroidism in hypophosphatemic rickets. 87 68

1. Previously published data obtained by magnesium infusion in man were found to conform to a Tm/glomerular filtration rate (GFR) model on the assumption of 80% diffusibility of plasma magnesium. The lower limit of Tm,Mg/GFR was 625 mumol/l. 2. Previously published data concerning the effect of cellulose phosphate on magnesium metabolism in normal subjects, patients with latent hypoparathyroidism and patients with primary hyperparathyroidism were found to conform to the same model, with the same limit for Tm,Mg/GFR for all three levels of parathyroid function. 3. The threshold for magnesium excretion is sharper with less 'splay' than for phosphate, but as for phosophate it is close to the normal blood concentration. 4. Because of the geometrical relationship between different methods of presentation of data, at a constant value for Tm,Mg/GFR changes in magnesium load or in GFR automatically produce changes in fractional magnesium clearance. This is the explanation for the increase in fractional magnesium clearance which occurs which with diminishing renal function. 5. Renal conservation of magnesium is a passive consequence of the fall in plasma magnesium. There was no evidence of augmented tubular reabsorption of magnesium in response to magnesium deprivation in any of the three groups of subjects. 6. The tubular reabsorption of magnesium was not altered detectably by a moderate deficiency or excess of parathyroid hormore. Changes in parathyroid hormone secretion are probably not concerned in normal magnesium homeostasis.
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PMID:The effect of cellulose phosphate on plasma and urinary magnesium at different levels of parathyroid function in man. 95 62

The urinary excretion of calcium and phosphate during the day and night was studied in 20 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism and in the same number of controls with normal function of the parathyroids. A significant difference in TRP between day and night was found in the controls but not in the HPT group. In other respects there were no substantial differences between day and night. The higher excretion of calcium observed in the HPT group was largely attributable to the patients with remal calculi. The simplified sampling procedure when only night urine is analysed has no disadvantages-it is more likely to improve the diagnostic reliability as it reduces the influence of meals, for example.
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PMID:Diurnal variations in the urinary excretion of calcium and phosphate in hyperparathyroidism. 98

A one-year material of 290 patients with clinically verified urolithiasis was screened for primary hyperparthyroidism, by X-ray examination, analysis of calculi, plasma calcium and phosphate, plasma parathyroid hormone and a clinical history examination. Primary hyperparathyroidism was found in 10 patients, 8 with adenomas and 2 with hyperplasia. The results suggest that with the present policy of investigation, there is a considerable underdiagnosis of parathyroid changes in patients with urolithiasis. An interesting finding was the distribution of plasma calcium concentrations in this material, which indicates that patients with urolithiasis have a generally higher lever of plasma calcium than others.
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PMID:Uroliathiasis with primary hyperparathyroidism. A one-year screening. 100 87

In examining a group of 90 hypercalcaemic patients (37 with primary hyperparathyroidism), a comparison was made of the diagnostic reliability of: 1) tests commonly used for diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism; 2) radioimmunoassay of plasma parathormone; 3) a recently introduced model of multivariate statistical analysis. The results indicate that, at present, the model of multivariate statistical analysis used is of higher diagnostic reliability in the diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism than renal phosphate excretion tests and the radioimmunoassay of PTH itself.
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PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism: diagnostic value of a model of multivariate statistical analysis. 102 48

1. The bivalent cation-binding agent, cellulose phosphate, together with a low calcium diet was given for 6 days to nine patients with primary hyperparathyroidism subsequently verified at surgery. 2. Urinary calcium fell promptly by 8-4 mmol/24 h, and by 70% and reached amounts below 4-0 mmol/24 h in five of the nine patients. The magnitude of fall may have been related to increased synthesis of vitamin D by the skin in a sub-tropical environment. Plasma magnesium fell steadily and urinary magnesium fell by 80%. 3. The plasma calcium showed two types of response. In five patients there was no significant change because a reduction in calcium load was offset by a further increase in the already high tubular reabsorption of calcium. In the remaining four patients, the tubular reabsorption of calcium was at a higher level initially and failed to increase further on the experimental regime, with a corresponding fall in plasma calcium. 4. The hypercalcaemia of primary hyperparathyroidism can be explained by increased renal tubular reabsorption of calcium; net bone resorption makes only a small contribution but an additional factor dependent on the blood-bone equilibrium is not ruled out. 5. Comparison with other published data suggests that the fall in urinary calcium in response to a calcium-depleting regimen is prevented by concurrent depletion of inorganic phosphate and may be enhanced by concurrent depletion of magnesium. 6. Persistence of hypercalcaemia combined with an increase in tubular reabsorption of calcium in response to cellulose phosphate may be of diagnostic value in suspected primary hyperparathyroidism. 7. Cellulose phosphate may be of value in stone prevention in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism who are unsuitable for surgical treatment.
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PMID:Effect of cellulose phosphate and dietary calcium restriction in primary hyperparathyroidism. 114 6

An increase in the average calcium oxalate content and decrease in average calcium phosphate content of stones received for analysis has been noted in a 9-year study. These changes appear to be due to a progressive increase in the number of patients with noninfected upper urinary tract stone and to the gradual elimination of phosphatic stones as a result of improved diagnosis and treatment. Some of the conditions associated with calcium phosphate stones are examined, particularly primary hyperparathyroidism, renal tubular acidosis, and medullary sponge kidney. These results further emphasize the importance of calcium oxalate in idiopathic stone disease and the need for a fuller understanding of the factors influencing calcium oxalate crystallization.
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PMID:Changes in the composition of urinary tract stones. 118 36

Vitamin D metabolites in serum and calcitriol receptor concentration in parathyroid tissue were examined in 52 patients operated on for primary hyperparathyroidism. The calcitriol receptor levels were not different in parathyroid adenomas (mean 224 fmol/mg of protein, range 29-509, N = 43), normal parathyroid tissue (mean 245, range 31-690, N = 20), and primary parathyroid hyperplasia (mean 172, range 46-477, N = 9). Preoperative serum levels of calcitriol concentration correlated inversely to the calcitriol receptor in normal parathyroid tissue in patients with adenoma (r = -0.57, N = 17, p = 0.017), but no such correlation was found in the corresponding adenomas (r = 0.14, p = 0.59). In 31 patients in whom both pre- and postoperative vitamin D metabolite analyses were carried out, 23 had lower calcitriol postoperative concentrations compared to preoperative values (p = 0.012, sign test). No change was found in the other vitamin D metabolites postoperatively. By multiple regression analysis calcitriol concentration in serum was inversely correlated to the serum concentration of urea and phosphate (p = 0.003). We conclude that calcitriol may influence calcitriol receptor expression in normal parathyroid tissue, but not in adenomatous parathyroid gland. Furthermore, serum calcitriol was correlated to the renal function, and phosphate level, and in most patients the calcitriol concentration was lower after the operation.
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PMID:Serum vitamin D metabolites and calcitriol receptor concentration in parathyroid tissue in primary hyperparathyroidism. 133


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