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)

We present here a series of seven children with primary hyperparathyroidism caused by parathyroid adenoma. Chief cells were the primary element in six patients and water-clear cells in one patient. A brief review of the literature on primary hyperparathyroidism in children is included. Emphasis is placed on the clinical characteristics of this rare disease in children.
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PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism in children. 371 90

Neonatal primary hyperparathyroidism is rare but must be evoke during respiratory distress with thoracic deformity and hypercalcemia. The plasma immunoreactive parathyroid hormone level allows the diagnostic. This case, with diffuse hyperplasia of water-clear cells type, develops rickets of vitamin D deficiency before surgery. A large parathyroidectomy (7/8) was performed and the child is normo-calcemic 2 years after. The time of surgery is function of calcium level.
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PMID:[Neonatal primary hyperparathyroidism caused by clear cell hyperplasia]. 402 15

The case of a patient with primary hyperparathyroidism in whom water-clear-cell hyperplasia (WCCH) involved only the superior glands, and disproportionately so, is presented. In addition, unlike the cases of WCCH described previously, a rim of normal parathyroid tissue was observed at the periphery of each gland in this case. It is speculated that these findings are not necessarily peculiar, but may reflect an earlier stage of the disease. Such cases may mimic parathyroid adenoma, thereby leading to inadequate surgical therapy.
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PMID:Water-clear-cell hyperplasia mimicking parathyroid adenoma. 404 57

Porcine calcitonin in a slow-release gelatin vehicle was given by intramuscular injection to 10 patients-four with primary hyperparathyroidism, four with Paget's disease, and two with carcinoma of the breast and hypercalcaemia. All cases showed a fall in serum calcium with an immediate rise in urine calcium. All except three patients with primary hyperparathyroidism showed a fall in serum phosphorus, but an immediate rise in urine phosphorus occurred in all cases. Urine hydroxyproline output fell in three patients with severe Paget's disease. Urine sodium rose in all cases, but the effects on potassium, magnesium, water, and pH were not appreciably different from results obtained in four control subjects who were given the gelatin vehicle alone.The data suggest that calcitonin caused a decrease in the tubular resorption of calcium and phosphorus. The hypocalcaemic effect appeared to be due to a decrease in bone resorption in the patients with Paget's disease but in the remaining cases could be accounted for in part or entirely by the rise in urine calcium.
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PMID:Renal effects of calcitonin. 546 Aug 39

Urine specimens were collected from 26 normal subjects, 10 patients with proven primary hyperparathyroidism, and eight patients with hypercalcaemia due to other causes. After overnight urine concentration, an oral water load was given to induce a diuresis and provide urine specimens with a relatively wide range of creatinine concentration for each subject. In normal subjects the urinary calcium/creatinine ratio was found to be independent of urine concentration. In eight out of 10 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism and in two out of eight patients with hyper-calcaemia due to other causes, the urinary calcium/creatinine ratio was found to be high when the creatinine concentration was low, but usually normal when the creatinine concentration was high. The results suggest that if the urinary calcium/creatinine ratio of random urine specimens is used as a ;screening' procedure to detect hypercalciuria the latter cannot be excluded if the urinary creatinine concentration is more than 40 mg per 100 ml.
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PMID:The urinary calcium-creatinine ratio as a measure of urinary calcium excretion. 578 80

A simple method for extraction, purification and separation of the principal vitamin D metabolites from a single serum sample is described. The method involved extraction of serum with acetonitrile followed by a first purification employing C-18 Sep-pak cartridges eluted with methanol/water and acetonitrile. Final separation before assay was carried out by high pressure liquid chromatography. 1.25-dihydroxy-vitamin D was measured with radioimmunoassay using an antiserum (S11) with high selectivity for 1 alpha-OH function of the hormone at a final dilution of 1:100,000. 24.25-dihydroxy-vitamin D and 25-hydroxy-vitamin D were measured employing a competitive binding assay with normal rat serum at a final dilution of 1:10,000 as source of binding protein. The mean (+/- SD) serum 1.25-dihydroxy-vitamin D, 24.25-dihydroxy-vitamin D and 25-hydroxy-vitamin D concentrations for a group of healthy subjects were 50.4 +/- 17.3 pg/ml, 2.3 +/- 2.6 ng/ml and 20.8 +/- 12.3 ng/ml, respectively. 1.25-dihydroxy-vitamin D concentrations were low or undetectable in patients on dialysis or with mild renal failure. High 1.25-dihydroxy-vitamin D levels were found in 2 out of 17 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. In 4 normal subjects treated for two weeks with large doses of 25-hydroxy-vitamin D, serum 25-hydroxy-vitamin D rose from 12.5 ng/ml to 119 ng/ml and from 0.89 ng/ml to 15 ng/ml, respectively; no changes in the 1.25-dihydroxy-vitamin D assay were found.
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PMID:Simultaneous measurement of 1.25-dihydroxy-vitamin D, 24.25-dihydroxy-vitamin D and 25-hydroxy-vitamin D from a single two milliliters serum specimen. Preliminary clinical application. 633 15

The influence of changes in the serum calcium concentration on TSH secretion was evaluated in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism and idiopathic hypoparathyroidism and in normal subjects. Serum calcium concentrations were 12.7 +/- 0.8, 9.0 +/- 0.4, and 5.7 +/- 0.5 mg/100 ml in hyperparathyroid, normal, and hypoparathyroid subjects, respectively, and were significantly different from each other. Serum T3 and T4 concentrations were comparable among the three groups. The basal serum TSH concentration was highest in hypoparathyroid, lowest in hyperparathyroid, and intermediate in normal subjects. However, all values were within normal limits and were not significantly different from each other. TRH-stimulated TSH secretion was significantly greater in hypoparathyroid patients and significantly less in hyperparathyroid patients than in normal subjects, respectively. The TSH response to TRH was normalized when the serum calcium concentration was normalized by parathyroidectomy in a hyperparathyroid patient or by 1 alpha-hydroxyvitamin D3 administration in a hypoparathyroid patient. To further clarify the mechanism responsible for the modified TSH response to TRH in the hypercalcemic state, rats were made chronically hypercalcemic by the administration of 1 alpha-hydroxyvitamin D3 (0.2 micrograms/100 g BW, ip, for 10 days) and 3% calcium chloride in drinking water. The pituitary TSH content of hypercalcemic rats was significantly greater than that of control rats. The results suggest that decreased TSH secretion produced by chronic hypercalcemia is due to diminished TSH release, rather than to decreased pituitary TSH reserve.
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PMID:Thyrotropin secretion in patients with hyperparathyroidism or hypoparathyroidism: effect of serum calcium on thyrotropin release. 640 63

During the period 1950-81, 678 cases of primary hyperparathyroidism were surgically treated at University College Hospital, London. The causes were a single adenoma in 575, two adenomas in 25, carcinoma in 20 (two of which had coexistent adenomas), chief cell hyperplasia in 56, and water clear cell hyperplasia in two. Histological diagnosis is not difficult except in some cases of carcinoma and in a few in which differentiation between recurrent hyperplasia and recurrent carcinoma is exceptionally difficult. In this paper we review all the cases of primary carcinoma of the parathyroid seen during this period to define those pathological features of value in the diagnosis.
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PMID:Histological diagnosis of carcinoma of the parathyroid gland. 651 82

Retrospective analysis has been performed on 108 consecutive patients operated for primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) at 75 to 85 years of age (mean 79 years). The preoperative serum calcium value averaged 2.99 mM, and six patients had hypercalcemic crisis. Psychic disturbances were seen in 60 patients (56%), 40% of whom demonstrated dementia. Skeletal and muscular complaints were registered in 29% and 19%, respectively, and only 6% were overtly asymptomatic. Cardiovascular diseases were presented by 69% of the patients, 13% had diabetes mellitus, and 26% were institutionalized prior to surgery. Bilateral neck exploration disclosed a single adenoma in 69%, which was of the oxyphil cell type in 13%, and water-clear (n = 3) or chief cell hyperplasia in 27%. The total glandular weight averaged 1085 mg. Altogether 72 patients operated on after 1980 demonstrated a perioperative (30-day) mortality of 1.4%; the corresponding morbidity of 8.7% mainly included infections as well as a vocal cord paralysis in one patient and two incisional hematomas. Analysis for mean 3.1 years postoperatively displayed reversal of hypercalcemia in 95% of the patients; 2.8% of those operated after 1980 had persistent disease. Symptoms seemed to be alleviated in 62%, with a similar rate attained in patients with dementia. Altogether 60 patients died from mainly cardiovascular diseases mean 4.2 years after the operation. Those succumbing the first postoperative year (n = 21) showed overrepresentation of cardiac diseases and diabetes mellitus. The results demonstrate prevalent psychic disturbances, oxyphil adenomas, and multiglandular parathyroid disease in elderly patients with primary HPT and favor rather liberal application of parathyroid surgery among these individuals.
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PMID:Surgery for sporadic primary hyperparathyroidism in the elderly. 772 53

Due to unstable angina pectoris coronary arteriography was performed in a 57 year-old female, showing diffuse 3-vessel disease; aortocoronary bypass surgery was recommended. During routine pre-operative examination hypercalcemia, as well as an elevated value of parathormone were observed. Ultrasonography of the parathyroid glands showed two enlarged cranial glands. In a simultaneous surgical procedure 4 bypass grafts were performed and 4 hyperplastic parathyroid glands were removed, one of which was re-operated as an autotransplantation in the left musculus adductor magnus. Histological examination showed water clear cell hyperplasia of the parathyroid glands. Though the patient had suffered from stomach and duodenal ulcers and nephrolithiasis over several years, primary hyperparathyroidism was diagnosed only after angiographically proven coronary artery disease.
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PMID:[Coronary heart disease as the initial manifestation of primary hyperparathyroidism]. 797 64


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