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Query: UMLS:C0221002 (
primary hyperparathyroidism
)
4,921
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 56-year-old woman presented with diabetes mellitus and
primary hyperparathyroidism
simultaneously. Initial random blood
glucose
was recorded at 20.8 mmol l-1, serum calcium was 3.07 mmol l-1 (normal range 2.10-2.55 mmol l-1), and plasma parathyroid hormone estimation by intact assay was 110 ng l-1 (normal range 10-65 ng l-1). Initial glycated haemoglobin was 9.4% (non-diabetic range < 7.5%). Left lower parathyroidectomy was carried out and pathology confirmed the presence of a chief cell adenoma. The gland measured 10 x 5 x 5 mm. Following parathyroidectomy serum calcium normalized,
glucose
tolerance improved, and a subsequent 75 g oral
glucose
tolerance test was normal. The patient weighted 80 kg at presentation but the post-operative weight had risen to 81.5 kg. The most recent glycated haemoglobin was 4.6%.
Primary hyperparathyroidism
may have a reversible effect on
glucose
tolerance.
...
PMID:Remission of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus following resection of a parathyroid adenoma. 901 58
Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN-1) is a well characterized hereditary syndrome with the occurrence of
primary hyperparathyroidism
(HPT) in combination with pancreatic-duodenal endocrine and anterior pituitary tumours. The diagnosis of MEN-1, the possible probands, necessitates the recognition of at least two or three lesions classically associated with the syndrome whilst only one of them is required for individuals belonging to established MEN-1 kindreds. A distinct feature of MEN-1 comprises the multiplicity of organ involvement, the multicentricity of tumours within the affected organs as well as the complex pattern of the clinical signs of these tumours and their sometimes temporarily variable profile of hormone excess. Thorough screening studies have demonstrated that the MEN-1 trait is biochemically detectable virtually two decades prior to clinically overt disease. The primary biochemical screening programme for MEN-1 includes serum prolactin and insulin growth factor 1 (IGF-1) for pituitary lesions, intact PTH and albumin corrected total serum calcium for the parathyroids and for duodenal/pancreatic tumours serum
glucose
, insulin, proinsulin, pancreatic polypeptide, glucagon, gastrin and plasma chromogranin A. Furthermore a standardized meal stimulatory test analysing serum polypeptides (PP) and gastrin is recommended. Our current primary screening procedure has yielded about 10% false positives when compared with RFLP data. Pancreatic endocrine tumour diagnosis must be biochemically established since radiology fails to show lesions in half of the patients. Pancreatic involvement in young MEN-1 patients is most consistently demonstrated by analysing serum insulin, proinsulin, PP as well as plasma glucagon chromogranin A levels, which have exhibited sensitivities of 56, 67, 37 and 60%, respectively. Serum PP is a non-specific marker of islet cell tumours that should be applied in conjunction with other peptide markers. Elevation of basal serum gastrin generally indicates the presence of advanced pancreatic tumour involvement or duodenal carcinoids. Early diagnosis of pancreatic endocrine tumours in MEN-1 is enhanced by the use of a standardized meal stimulation test with measurements of serum PP and gastrin response. This test was the most sensitive test and substantiated the presence of tumour in 75% of individuals whose mean age was 25 years. False-positive stimulation due to the meal test has been found in about 10% of previous investigated individuals. The diagnosis of MEN-1 pancreatic tumours is based on biochemical screening alone and it has been substantiated that an unequivocal rise in pancreatic tumour markers precedes radiological detection of these lesions by at least five years.
...
PMID:The ultimate biochemical diagnosis of endocrine pancreatic tumours in MEN-1. 968 45
Is surgery for
primary hyperparathyroidism
easier when methylene blue (MB) is given preoperatively? This retrospective study compares the durations of interventions for
primary hyperparathyroidism
carried out after i.v. MB administration to those when no MB was given. Over a period of 20 years (June 1976 to December 1996), 175 consecutive patients (56 men and 119 women, with ages ranging from 16 to 92, mean 59.6) were operated upon for primary hyperparathyrodism; 55 were operated before February 1986--the period when BM was introduced routinely, and 120 after. Thirty-two other patients were excluded from the study: 14 had had a previous cervicotomy and 18 another procedure in addition to the parathyroidectomy (usually on the thyroid gland), two conditions which prolonged the time devoted to parathyroid identification and excision. Preoperative calcemia averaged 2.97 mmol/L (2.34 to 4.59) and mean preoperative PTH was equal to 2.6 times the upper normal limit (0.5 to 24.1). Both groups were similar for as age, sex, preoperative calcium and PTH, and histologies. Methylene blue was administered intravenously (5 mg/kg diluted in 500 cc of 5%
glucose
) over a period of time of one hour starting two hours prior to surgery. All 175 procedures were performed by two surgeons and duration of surgery was recorded from the anesthesiologist's notes. There were 149 adenomas (85%), 24 hyperplasias (14%), a combination of both in two, and unspecified in two others. Except for a case of acute lower back pain synchronous to the injection of the dye (which was immediately stopped), MB was well tolerated. Mean duration for the 55 interventions performed without MB was 68 minutes (35 to 140, median 60), compared to 49 minutes for the 120 procedures carried out after MB had been given (20 to 155, median 45). Differences in operative, times were highly significant (p < 10(-6) and represented a gain of time of 27%. Surgery for
primary hyperparathyroidism
was significantly shorter when it was preceded by the administration of MB, a dye which facilitates the identification of pathologic parathyroid gland(s).
...
PMID:[Methylene blue in surgery of primary hyperparathyroidism]. 975 95
Disturbances of
glucose
metabolism with hyperinsulinism and peripheral insulin resistance are frequently observed in patients with hyperparathyroidism. The mechanism of how hyperparathyroidism affects
glucose
metabolism is not known. Hypercalcemia, hypophosphatemia and the parathyroid hormone itself seem to be involved. However, parathyroidectomy exerted rather variable effects on
glucose
metabolism: In patients with fully developed diabetes mellitus both, a complete normalisation of
glucose
tolerance as well as no change in the metabolic situation have been observed. We report a 64-year old female patient with
primary hyperparathyroidism
and diabetes mellitus. The patient had severe insulin resistance with insulin requirements of 200 IU/day. Fasting insulin and C-peptide levels were elevated. After successful operation of a parathyroid adenoma there was a marked improvement in diabetes, and the patient's insulin requirement decreased to one third of the preoperative dose. This case further illustrates the association between
primary hyperparathyroidism
and diabetes mellitus and the potential improvement of the metabolic situation after parathyroidectomy.
...
PMID:[Improvement of diabetes mellitus after excision of a parathyroid adenoma]. 1002 37
The prevalence of diabetes mellitus in
primary hyperparathyroidism
is approximately 8% and that of
primary hyperparathyroidism
in diabetic patients is approximately 1%. Both values are about three-fold higher than the respective expected prevalences in general populations. Patients with both disorders are over 40 years of age and 80% are female; 22% have type 1 and 78% type 2 diabetes.
Primary hyperparathyroidism
presents first in approximately 20% of patients, and diabetes mellitus in 40%; both disorders present together, or within 1 year, in 40%. Approximately 40% of patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
have impaired glucose tolerance. Insulin resistance is present in hyperparathyroidism and probably arises from a raised intracellular free calcium concentration which, by decreasing normal insulin-stimulated
glucose
transport, increases the requirement for insulin: if this insulin resistance progresses, impaired glucose tolerance and diabetes mellitus would result. Parathyroidectomy has been followed by regression of diabetes and of impaired glucose tolerance in some but not all patients. Early diagnosis of the second disorder is clinically desirable when one disorder is present. Hyperparathyroid patients should therefore be screened for impaired glucose tolerance and diabetes annually, and pre-operatively. Diabetic patients should be checked for hypercalcaemia at appropriate intervals; although only 1% of them may have hyperparathyroidism, this disorder if untreated is associated with hypertension, to which diabetic patients are already prone.
...
PMID:Coincident diabetes mellitus and primary hyperparathyroidism. 1142 30
Population-based screening showed 2.1% prevalence of
primary hyperparathyroidism
(pHPT) in postmenopausal women. Individuals with total serum (s)-calcium levels of 2.55 mmol/L or more at screening were diagnosed with pHPT when subsequent analysis supported inappropriately elevated intact parathormone (PTH) levels in relation to even normal s-calcium levels. The arbitrary diagnostic criteria were validated by parathyroidectomy. Herein we reinvestigated biochemical signs of pHPT in women not diagnosed with pHPT due to s-calcium 2.50 to 2.54 mmol/L (group A, n = 160) at screening or due to appropriate PTH levels on two occasions after screening (group B, n = 70). Altogether, 99 women in group A and 47 in group B underwent reinvestigation 8.8 years after screening when they were 65 to 84 years old. The s-calcium levels averaged 2.56 mmol/L and had increased in group A (mean 0.04 mmol/L) and decreased in group B (mean 0.05 mmol/L). A total of 48 and 18 females (48%, 38%), respectively, met the previously validated criteria of pHPT. Altogether 21% of them were hypercalcemic (range 2.60-3.12 mmol/L). Subgroup analysis showed that PTH had not increased with time (n = 47) and that atherogenic blood lipids, but not
glucose
levels, were similar in pHPT patients and matched controls (n = 37). Assuming the existence of pHPT already at screening, the prevalence of pHPT could be adjusted to 3.4%. Even the most liberal diagnostic criteria utilized at pHPT screening seemed to underdiagnose the disease by inefficient cutoff limits for s-calcium and PTH. Because one-fifth of the women with pHPT progressed to hypercalcemia, long-term follow-up is advocated for those with s-calcium in the upper normal range.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism revisited in menopausal women with serum calcium in the upper normal range at population-based screening 8 years ago. 1204 63
In recent decades,
primary hyperparathyroidism
(pHPT) has changed its clinical presentation from a disease with bone and renal involvement to a frequently asymptomatic disorder detected on routine biochemistry. Nevertheless, it remains unclear whether patients with untreated mild asymptomatic hyperparathyroidism are at risk for other complications such as increased morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular diseases. There are limited data on the incidence of cardiovascular abnormalities in mild pHPT. However, pHPT has been associated with increased risk of death from cardiovascular disease, hypertension, left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), valvular and myocardial calcifications, impaired vascular reactivity, alterations in cardiac conduction, impaired
glucose
metabolism, dyslipidaemia, and alterations in body composition. The nature of some of these associations is in question, because cure of pHPT does not lead to improvement of the cardiovascular disorder e.g. hypertension. In contrast, currently available data suggest that LVH, impaired
glucose
metabolism and dyslipidaemia may improve after surgery and that successful parathyroidectomy could decrease the excess mortality in patients with pHPT due to cardiovascular disease.
...
PMID:Parathyroid adenomas and cardiovascular risk. 1279 Jul 92
Pheochromocytoma may infrequently lead to dilated cardiomyopathy, which may reverse partially or completely after treatment. Progressive dyspnea, palpitations, and paroxysmal attacks of severe hypertension leading to cardiac failure had developed in a 25-yr-old woman. Chest radiography and echocardiography revealed a massive 4-chamber dilatation of the heart with an ejection fraction of 12%. Twenty-four-h urinary vanillylmandelic acid and metanephrine levels were elevated. Magnetic resonance imaging detected a large mass lesion in the right adrenal gland. Oral
glucose
tolerance testing revealed diabetes mellitus. Medical drug therapy with alpha-blocker, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor, beta-blocker, digoxin, and diuretic rapidly improved her cardiac condition. Repeat echocardiogram showed that the left ventricular function had improved substantially. The clinical condition of excess catecholaminemia (and thus, arterial hypertension and the abnormality of the
glucose
metabolism) subsided with complete resolution of the congestive heart failure following the surgical removal of the tumor. Evaluation for medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) revealed an elevated calcitonin level demonstrated by fine needle aspiration biopsy. There were no biochemical evidences for
primary hyperparathyroidism
. Multiple endocrine neoplasia 2 (MEN 2A) syndrome was diagnosed. An overwhelming secretion of catecholamine might cause severe cardiomyopathy and impair
glucose
metabolism, as evidenced by the improvement of both conditions following the medical treatment of catecholaminemia and surgical resection of the tumor.
...
PMID:Severe reversible dilated cardiomyopathy in a patient with multiple endocrine neoplasia 2A syndrome. 1669 5
Primary hyperparathyroidism
(PHPT) has been associated with high cardiovascular morbidity and mortality; its pathogenesis is not fully understood. Moreover, many metabolic abnormalities are frequently present in patients with PHPT. Several substances (such as leptin and adiponectin) are secreted from adipocytes, which may contribute to regulate energy homeostasis and the development of cardiovascular diseases. We examined the relationship between leptin and adiponectin levels and metabolic disorders in 67 newly diagnosed never-treated patients with PHPT and in 46 healthy subjects (HS). Twenty (29.8%) patients with PHPT presented a metabolic syndrome (as defined by Adult Treatment Panel III criteria). Serum leptin and adiponectin levels in HS were 6.28 +/- 3.3 ng/mL (range, 1.7-19.2 ng/mL) and 6.65 +/- 1.7 microg/mL (range, 3.72-10.86 microg/mL), respectively. In all patients with PHPT, the mean leptin levels (34.28 +/- 20.4 ng/mL) were significantly higher than those of HS (P < .01) and, in particular, in PHPT patients with metabolic syndrome (52.63 +/- 31.2 ng/mL) and positively correlated with body mass index, waist circumference, and cholesterol. The mean adiponectin level was significantly lower (4.34 +/- 3.5 mug/mL) only in PHPT patients with metabolic syndrome (P < .005) and negatively correlated with waist circumference and fasting
glucose
. We concluded that increased serum level of leptin and decreased serum level of adiponectin coexist in patients with PHPT and may represent a pathogenetic factor for cardiovascular disease in this condition.
...
PMID:Circulating leptin and adiponectin levels in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. 1716 Dec 23
How
glucose
levels affect bone in patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
is unknown, although the prevalence of impaired
glucose
metabolism is higher in patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
. The present study was performed to examine the relationships between fasting plasma
glucose
(FPG) and various indices in 93 postmenopausal women with
primary hyperparathyroidism
. Bone mineral density (BMD) and body composition were measured by dual-energy Xray absorptiometry. Body weight, body mass index (BMI), fat mass and % fat were positively related to FPG. Serum levels of calcium and parathyroid hormone (PTH) as well as bone metabolic indices were not related to FPG and immunoreactive insulin levels. As for BMD, FPG was positively related to the Z scores of BMD at the lumbar spine and femoral neck, although it was not significantly related to the Z-score of BMD at the radius. On the other hand, immunoreactive insulin levels were not significantly related to BMD parameters at any sites. In multiple regression analysis, FPG was significantly related to BMD (Z score) at the lumbar spine and femoral neck, when body weight, BMI, immunoreactive insulin, PTH, and bone resorption indices were considered; however, these relationships at the lumbar spine were not significant when fat mass was considered. In conclusion, the present study indicated that FPG levels were positively related to BMD at the lumbar spine and femoral neck in postmenopausal women with
primary hyperparathyroidism
.
...
PMID:Fasting plasma glucose levels are related to bone mineral density in postmenopausal women with primary hyperparathyroidism. 1907 76
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