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Query: UMLS:C0221002 (primary hyperparathyroidism)
4,921 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The clinical peculiarities, and the etiological and pathogenetic factors of urolithiasis in 296 patients suffering from spontaneous stone elimination were studied. It was established that 209 patients eliminated stones consisting of uric acid, sodium salts and ammonium salts. Moderate hypocalcemia and hyperphosphatemia and also hyperuricemia and hyperuricuria were present. There were 39 'eliminators' of calcium stones. Their blood calcium content was higher, hypercalciuria, inorganic phosphorus and normal uric acid, were noted. Compound stones were present in 48 observations. When carrying out additional biochemical tests in 57 patients with calcium and compound stones, primary hyperparathyroidism was diagnosed in 34 observations; and parathyroidectomy was successfully performed.
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PMID:On the pathogenesis of stone formation in stone-eliminating patients. 42 6

An assessment of free and total calcium measurements was made in 691 patients with suspected hypercalcemia or disorders often associated with hypercalcemia. In 18.9% of the 1049 specimens analyzed from nine different patient groups, a different impression of hypercalcemia was obtained depending on whether the free or total calcium was considered. Analysis of the ratio of free to total calcium indicated that there are two main factors which influence the distribution of calcium in the serum of hypercalcemic patients: the concentrations of albumin and parathyroid hormone. A lowered albumin concentration accounted for the altered distribution of calcium in patients with malignancies and partially accounted for the altered distribution in patients postrenal transplantation. In patients with confirmed primary hyperparathyroidism a higher ratio of free to total calcium was found, which could not be explained by alterations in protein, albumin, pH, or CO2 content but was related to parathyroid hormone concentration. Free calcium appears to be a slightly better indicator of elevated calcium states than total calcium. Measurements of free calcium should be particularly useful in patients with altered albumin concentration, with multiple myeloma in whom a calcium-binding protein could be present, after renal transplantation, and with suspected hyperparathyroidism and normal or slightly elevated total calcium values.
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PMID:Relationship of free and total calcium in hypercalcemic conditions. 42 92

Chemotactic and random migrations of neutrophils derived from four patients with primary hyperparathyroidism were found to be defective. These abnormalities improved significantly in parallel with the decrease in serum calcium and parathormone and with the increase in serum phosphorus concentration after surgical removal of the adenoma. These observation suggest a possible role for parathormone phosphorus and calcium in the motility of neutrophils.
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PMID:Reversible defect of neutrophil chemotaxis and random migration in primary hyperparathyroidism. 42 3

Serum total calcium was measured in 1693 patients during a four-month period. We examined the effects of adjustment for albumin concentration on the interpretation of single measurements of serum total calcium and on the variation of series of measurements in individual patients. Markedly abnormal total calcium concentrations--2.75 mmol/l (11.0 mg/100 ml) or more, or 2.00 mmol/l (8.0 mg/100 ml) or less--were found in 115 patients, but only 24 (21%) remained markedly abnormal after adjustment for albumin. Three patients, two with malignant disease and one with primary hyperparathyroidism, had significant hypercalcaemia which was masked by hypoalbuminaemia. The serum total calcium measured on a subsequent occasion had changed 0.15 mmol/l (0.6 mg/100 ml) or more in 60 patients, but after adjustment for albumin this number was reduced to 27 (45%). The within-person standard deviation for serum total calcium was calculated in 26 patients with normal mean adjusted calcium concentrations who had had six or more sequential measurements. The mean standard deviation was 0.148 mmol/1 (0.59 mg/100 ml) and, after adjustment for albumin, this was reduced to 0.100 mmol/1 (0.40 mg/100 ml). We conclude that adjustment of serum total calcium concentration for albumin is essential to detect abnormal values and to assess changes in a value.
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PMID:Interpretation of serum total calcium: effects of adjustment for albumin concentration on frequency of abnormal values and on detection of change in the individual. 42 80

Parathyroid morphology and blood chemistry were studied in five patients with primary hyperparathyroidism treated with 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol (1,25-DHCC) for 2 to 11 days before planned operation. Before the institution of treatment all patients were hypercalcemic, whereas the serum immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH) concentration either was elevated or normal. During the treatment the urinary phosphate excretion was significantly increased, whereas the calcium excretion and the serum concentrations of calcium and phosphate were unaffected or only slightly changed. Serum iPTH decreased during the first days of treatment, but returned then to increased levels close to the pretreatment ones. The treatment was tolerated well by the patients. Light and electron microscopy of the removed parathyroid glands disclosed one adenoma in each of the five patients, the other glands exhibiting either a slight hyperplasia or a normal appearance. Both the adenomatous and the non-adenomatous parathyroid tissue showed a predominance of dark chief cells and three of the adenomas exhibited a varying number of atrophic and oxyphil cells. The non-adenomatous glands were composed of atrophic and dark chief cells. Signs of low functional activity were ultrastructurally observed in the parathyroid parenchymal cells. It is suggested that 1,25-DHCC treatment of patients with primary hyperparathyroidism inhibits parathyroid hormone secretion.
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PMID:Influence of 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol on parathyroid activity in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. 43 14

The importance of calcitonin in the homeostatic response to the chronic hypercalcemia of primary hyperparathyroidism is uncertain. To clarify this issue, we have used a new, sensitive radioimmunoassay for human calcitonin to measure basal plasma calcitonin concentrations in 50 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (32 female, 18 male). We assayed calcium-stimulated calcitonin concentrations preoperatively in 22 of the patients (16 female, 6 male) and postoperatively in 6. Finally, we assayed pentagastrin-stimulated calcitonin concentrations preoperatively in eight of the patients (three female, five male). Plasma calcitonin values after an overnight fast were indistinguishable from those in normal subjects (mean+/-SE, males, 48+/-3 normal and 46+/-5 pg/ml hyperparathyroid, females, 31+/-2 normal and 37+/-3 pg/ml hyperparathyroid.) Among hyperparathyroid patients of both sexes, increases of calcitonin during Ca infusion (15 mg Ca/kg in 4 h) were within normal limits. However, the mean maximal increase of calcitonin was significantly lower in hyperparathyroid than in normal subjects (P < 0.05). In six patients normocalcemic 5-15 mo after parathyroid surgery, fasting plasma calcitonin values were not significantly different, but responses to Ca infusion were greater than preoperatively (Delta calcitonin +/-SE: 13+/-4 preoperatively and 53+/-35 pg/ml postoperatively). The mean maximal increase of calcitonin after pentagastrin (0.5 mug/kg i.v.) was slightly lower than normal in the patients (mean+/-SE, males, 45+/-8 normal and 38+/-10 pg/ml hyperparathyroid, females, 6+/-2 normal and 0 pg/ml hyperparathyroid). Thus, primary hyperparathyroidism is accompanied by normal steady-state concentrations of circulating calcitonin, and normal-to-blunted C-cell responses to pentagastrin or induced hypercalcemia, the response to calcium generally increasing after successful parathyroid surgery. These results clearly show that primary hyperparathyroidism is not characterized by hypercalcitoninemia. The seemingly paradoxical absence of elevated steady-state calcitonin concentrations may be accounted for partly by decreased secretory reserve. However, primary hyperparathyroidism may also be accompanied by an increase in the threshold of sensitivity for calcium stimulation of calcitonin secretion.
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PMID:Pre- and postoperative studies of plasma calcitonin in primary hyperparathyroidism. 43 24

Two patients with hypercalcemia and hyperthyroidism had elevated levels of parathyroid hormone (PTH). When the patients were made euthyroid with appropriate medical therapy, both the levels of PTH and calcium returned to normal. Since thyroid hormone can increase tissue responsiveness to catecholamines, and since catecholamines can stimulate PTH secretion, we postulate that the elevated levels of PTH were secondary to thyrotoxicosis. In patients with coexisting hyperthyroidism and hyperparathyroidism, primary hyperparathyroidism should only be diagnosed when the patient is eumetabolic.
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PMID:Thyrotoxicosis, hypercalcemia, and secondary hyperparathyroidism. 44 69

Experience gained from 100 patients with surgically and histologically proven primary hyperparathyroidism over a period of 14 years led to simplification of diagnostic procedures and development of a surgical scheme. Over the years patients with discrete disease symptoms or with asymptomatic disease were observed more frequently. This can be seen as the result of earlier diagnosis due to increasing spread of laboratory autoanalysers and the resulting routine calcium determination. Development of surgical intervention is characterised by omitting preoperative diagnostic procedures to determine localisation, a schematised operation, and more reliance on macroscopic criteria rather than on quick sections during surgery.
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PMID:[Primary hyperparathyroidism (author's transl)]. 44 77

In three groups--patients with recurrent calcium urolithiasis (RCU), patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT), and healthy controls--citrate was measured enzymatically in 24 and in 2-hr urine after an overnight fast. Citrate excretion per 24 hr was significantly lower in RCU than in age and sex matched controls, whereas there was no significant difference in citrate excretion in urines from the 2-hr morning collection. In pHPT citrate was also lower than in controls and fell within the range of RCU of comparable age. Both categories of urines (24 and 2hr) have in common the characteristic that the actual citrate concentration is lower by 50 per cent in RCU and pHPT than in controls, mainly as a result of the higher urine volume. Correction of citrate for creatinine does not disclose further differences among the populations studied but conversely hampers exact interpretation of urinary citrate in the absence of strict separation of individuals according to sex and age. From these data we conclude that (i) a low excretion and concentration of urinary citrate is detectable in calcium lithiasis and may contribute to a deficiency in inhibitory activity against nucleating processes in stone-forming urine; and (ii) the differences in urinary citrate elicited in samples of 24 and 2-hr morning urine are of unknown origin and merit further investigations.
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PMID:Citrate in daily and fasting urine: results of controls, patients with recurrent idiopathic calcium urolithiasis, and primary hyperparathyroidism. 44 79

We have studied 83 patients with recurrent calcium stone formation in an attempt to determine an approximate incidence of metabolic disturbances associated with stone disease. Male veterans (n = 42), male non-veterans (n = 13), and women (n = 28) composed the group. We divided the groups in such fashion because they represented generally two distinct socioeconomic groups. Primary hyperparathyroidism was present in 19 per cent of the subjects; a marked predominance of women (15/16) was noted. Hypercalciuria of renal or intestinal origin was present in 23 per cent of the group. Of interest was a group of male veterans (17/83) in whom normocalciuria, normocalcemia, and normal serum phosphate were associated with high values of immunoreactive parathyroid hormone. These subjects had low urine phosphate. This set of findings indicates that these patients may be a new subgroup of stone-forming patients. Metabolic abnormalities could not be detected in 38 per cent of the patients. Classification of stone subjects is essential for rational management.
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PMID:Some characteristics of recurrent calcium stone formers in Puerto Rico. 45 11


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