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)

Pamidronate (aminopropylidene diphosphonate, APD) is known to be an effective agent in lowering plasma calcium in cancer associated hypercalcaemia and in primary hyperparathyroidism. Combined therapy with pamidronate and calcitonin has proved efficient in the treatment of severe cancer-associated hypercalcaemia. A 66-year-old woman in hypercalcaemic crisis caused by primary hypreparathyroidism was successfully treated with this combined therapy. Albumin corrected plasma calcium was 5.26 mmol/l on arrival and the PTH level was very high. The combined therapy lowered the plasma calcium to normal and made it possible to perform elective parathyreoidectomy. A 5.8 g parathyroid adenoma was removed. It is recommended to consider combined therapy with pamidronate and calcitonin in the emergency management of hypercalcaemic crisis.
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PMID:[Combination therapy with pamidronate and calcitonin in hypercalcemic crisis caused by primary hyperparathyroidism]. 146 41

The authors treated 18 patients with Paget's disease of bone (12 men and 6 women, age 65 +/- 5 years) with pamidronate (bisphosphonate of the second generation). Three patients from this group were treated previously without success with calcitonin or bisphosphonate of the first generation (etidronate) 50% of the patients suffered from the polyostotic form of the disease. In one patient a rare combination of primary hyperparathyroidism with Paget's bone disease was found and in another patient later an osteosarcoma developed in the affected bone. To all patients sodium pamidronate was administered (Aredia, Ciba-Geigy) 30 mg per day by i.v. infusion for 2 hours during three days. Four patients developed fever, two patients phlebitis at the site of injection. These side-effects are described by the manufacturer. Two patients developed transient regional alopecia, not described so far. Subjective pain relief of the affected skeleton occurred in one patient after one month of treatment, after three months in 78%. Laboratory manifestations of activity of the disease (serum activity of alkaline phosphatase, tartrate resistant acid phosphatase and hydroxyprolinuria) declined gradually from the 1st to the 6th month after onset of treatment. There was a less marked decline of the osteocalcin serum concentration. The concentration of calcium, phosphorus and vitamin D metabolites did not change markedly. Twelve months after treatment 14.7% of the patients were inactive according to laboratory tests, 73% however experienced another rise of parameters of osteoresorption and osteoformation. Pamidronate treatment in patients with Paget's disease of bone is effective and safe.
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PMID:[Paget's disease of bone and treatment with pamidronate]. 837 65

An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for measuring type I collagen degradation products in serum (S-ELISA) was developed. The assay uses a high affinity polyclonal antibody which reacts with an isomerized form of an 8 amino acid sequence of the C-telopeptides of type I collagen (EKAHD-beta-GGR). Cross-reactivity to a nonisomerized synthetic peptide form of the 8 amino acid sequence is less than 0.2%. Values obtained in a group of premenopausal women (age, 33.3 +/- 3.11 years) were 69 +/- 24 ng/ml(n = 22). In a group of early postmenopausal women (age, 51.8 +/- 1.88 years) values obtained were 125 +/- 43 ng/ml (n = 46), which represents an increase of 81% (p < 0.001). Values found in untreated patients with Paget's disease were 234 +/- 95 ng/ml (n = 15), and for primary hyperparathyroidism we found 335 +/- 82 ng/ml (n = 10). Intravenous administration of a bisphosphonate (Pamidronate) to Paget's disease patients for 3 days was reflected in the S-ELISA by a decrease in the values of 55% when compared with values before treatment (n = 15). Following treatment with another bisphosphonate (Alendronate) for 6 months, values were decreased to 48 +/- 19 ng/ml (n = 12), which corresponds to a 62% decrease. Clinical results presented in this context support that the assay is a sensitive and specific index of bone resorption. It may, therefore, prove useful in the follow up of treatment of patients with metabolic bone diseases and in the clinical investigation of osteoporosis.
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PMID:Measurement of bone degradation products in serum using antibodies reactive with an isomerized form of an 8 amino acid sequence of the C-telopeptide of type I collagen. 920 1