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Query: UMLS:C0221002 (
primary hyperparathyroidism
)
4,921
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Until recently, nonfunctioning parathyroid cysts were usually identified at operation for a presumed thyroid mass.
Thyroid
needle biopsy now allows their preoperative diagnosis and potential definitive treatment. This study reviews four patients with nonfunctioning parathyroid cysts treated during a two-year period. Three women and one man range in age from 28 to 70 years. Each presented with an asymptomatic thyroid mass ranging from 3 to 5 cm in length. None had symptoms of
primary hyperparathyroidism
. Serum calciums were from 9.2 to 10.7 mg/dl and serum phosphoruses were 3.2 to 4.4 mg/dl. Needle aspiration revealed 5 to 85 cc of water-clear fluid. C-terminal parathyroid hormone in three patients was 12,600, 6,500 and 61,200 pg/ml and N-terminal PTH was 1,700 pg/ml in one. All four had normal serum calcium and phosphorus on follow-up ranging from six months to two years. Two patients had resolution of their cysts with a single aspiration. One patient had recurrence but has no evidence of recurrence six months after injection with tetracycline. Another patient had a recurrence but remains well one year following reaspiration. Nonfunctioning parathyroid cysts present as a thyroid mass. Needle aspiration of water-clear fluid high in parathormone is diagnostic and, in most patients, is the therapeutic modality of choice.
...
PMID:Needle aspiration of nonfunctioning parathyroid cysts. 236 85
The prevalence of thyroid, parathyroid, and salivary abnormalities was determined in 91 women who received an average of 112 fluoroscopic chest examinations during pneumothorax treatment for tuberculosis more than 40 yr previously and in 72 women treated for tuberculosis by other modalities.
Thyroid
abnormalities were determined by physical examination, scintiscans, and measurements of serum free T4 index, TSH, and thyroid microsomal antibodies.
Thyroid
nodules were diagnosed in 7.7% of the exposed and 4.2% of the comparison group (prevalence ratio, 1.8; 90% confidence interval 0.6-5.7). Autoimmune thyroid disease was diagnosed in 15.2% of the exposed and 6.9% of the comparison group (prevalence ratio, 2.2; 95% confidence interval, 0.8-6.2). No salivary tumors were detected. Two exposed women and 1 comparison woman had
primary hyperparathyroidism
. Although absorbed dose to the thyroid could not be precisely determined, approximately 60 rads would be expected to yield the observed excess of thyroid nodules. While the prevalence ratios were not significantly increased in the exposed group, the results suggest that susceptibility of the thyroid to nodules from cumulative radiation doses of this magnitude could be increased even when the doses are accumulated over years and that such x-ray exposure of the thyroid gland may predispose the patient to the development of autoimmune disease.
...
PMID:Thyroid, parathyroid, and salivary gland evaluations in patients exposed to multiple fluoroscopic examinations during tuberculosis therapy: a pilot study. 333 10
Sixty-three patients with biochemically proven
primary hyperparathyroidism
underwent CT of the neck and upper chest prior to surgery. All examinations were prospectively evaluated. Parathyroid adenomas were correctly identified on CT in 81% of patients.
Thyroid
adenomas, tortuous vessels, the esophagus, and atypical parathyroid adenomas may be potential sources of error in the diagnosis of parathyroid adenomas.
...
PMID:CT evaluation of parathyroid adenomas: diagnostic criteria and pitfalls. 339 66
The causes, evaluation, and preoperative and postoperative care of
primary hyperparathyroidism
and thyroid nodules in the elderly patient population have been described.
Primary hyperparathyroidism
is easily diagnosed and is almost always curable by surgery. Elderly patients with asymptomatic disease are candidates for nonoperative, expectant management. If they become symptomatic, surgery should be performed. Postoperative care of the elderly patient who has undergone parathyroid exploration is potentially complicated by the patient's other medical problems, including cardiac and pulmonary difficulties, variable severity of symptoms of hypocalcemia, and sensitivity to medications.
Thyroid
nodules in the elderly may present later than in younger patients and are more likely to contain malignant tissue. Tissue diagnosis preoperatively, usually by FNA testing, is mandatory. Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma and thyroid lymphoma are both treated nonoperatively.
Thyroid
surgery in the elderly is usually well tolerated, although other medical conditions, as mentioned above, may complicate postoperative care. Thyroid carcinoma in the elderly carries a worse prognosis than in younger patients and should always be treated with postoperative adjuvant (radioablative) therapy. Although this does not affect survival (from the thyroid cancer), it does extend the disease-free interval. As the number of elderly patients increases, the frequency with which these disorders are encountered will also rise. It is important to realize that almost all elderly patients can both tolerate and benefit from surgical correction of these two disorders, if appropriate preoperative evaluation is coupled with excellent intraoperative and postoperative care.
...
PMID:Endocrine surgical diseases of elderly patients. 810 64
A number of previous studies have reported a greater incidence of thyroid disease in patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
(HPT) than in normal patients. However, few of these studies utilized controls, and most have dealt only with gross thyroid nodules and not with total histologic abnormalities. In order to clarify this problem, thyroid pathology was determined in each of 100 consecutive patients operated upon for HPT.
Thyroid
nodules were excised, but in addition, a random biopsy of the thyroid was performed in all cases. Patients in this group were matched by age, race, and sex with non-HPT autopsy controls. Histologic slides were reviewed by a single pathologist blinded to the patient's group. Data for the matched pairs were analyzed by the Sign test. There was no significant difference in the prevalence of colloid nodular disease between patients with HPT (45) and the autopsy control group (43, P = 0.2). There was also no significant difference in the prevalence of lymphocytic thyroiditis between HPT patients (24) and control (15, P = 0.07). There was likewise no significant difference in the prevalence of other benign thyroid gland diseases between the two groups. Only nonmedullary cancer of the thyroid was shown to be statistically more prevalent in HPT patients than in autopsy controls (7% vs 0%, respectively; P < 0.02). The major factor that accounts for the coexistence of benign thyroid lesions and HPT is that both are prevalent in middle-aged women.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Increased incidence of thyroid cancer in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism: a continuing dilemma. 819 34
Primary hyperparathyroidism
is seldom associated with other autoimmune disorders. The presence of normocalcemia in
primary hyperparathyroidism
should prompt the physician to look for vitamin D deficiency. This observation concerns a 34-year-old vegetarian woman with combined
primary hyperparathyroidism
, Graves' disease, and celiac disease. The patient presented with severe bone deformities; she was unable to walk, and had severe muscular weakness and weight loss. Biochemical findings revealed severe hyperparathyroidism with normocalcemia, hypophosphatemia, very low urinary calcium, and low 25-hydroxy vitamin D level.
Thyroid
tests showed hyperthyroidism with positive thyroid receptor antibodies, confirming the presence of Graves' disease. Positive antigliadin and antireticulin antibodies and complete villous atrophy on duodenal biopsy established the presence of celiac disease. The patient underwent a near-total thyroidectomy, with the removal of a parathyroid adenoma. To our knowledge, this observation is the first finding of an association between celiac disease, Graves' disease, and
primary hyperparathyroidism
. It emphasizes the need to rule out intestinal malabsorption in the case of normocalcemic hyperparathyroidism.
...
PMID:Osteomalacia secondary to celiac disease, primary hyperparathyroidism, and Graves' disease. 947 14
Primary hyperparathyroidism
, characterized by hypersecretion of parathyroid hormone (PTH) leading to hypercalcemia and relative hypophosphatemia, is quite common in the elderly. Most patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
have only mild hypercalcemia and are symptomless. But others experience various other organ diseases.
Primary hyperparathyroidism
is also associated with cardiovascular abnormalities, including QT interval shortening, heart block, cardiac arrhythmias, hypertension, myocardial hypertrophy, myocardial calcification and, though rarely, with valvular heart disease. We described a case of
primary hyperparathyroidism
associated with cardiac abnormalities. An 82-year-old male presented with the complaints of chest discomfort, fatigue, general weakness, nausea and vomiting over a period of months and was admitted in July 1996. Physical examination with heart auscultation showed a pansystolic murmur over the right sternal border and apex region, and a blowing diastolic murmur over the left sternal border. Biochemistry profiles revealed elevations of serum calcium (14.3 mg/dl) and chloride/phosphate ratio (> 33). Endocrinological studies showed elevations of serum PTH-C (4.8 ng/ml) and PTH-intact (705 pg/ml) concentrations. Kidney ultrasonography revealed a left renal stone. A spine X-ray revealed spondylosis and a compression fracture of the lumbar-spine with osteoporotic change.
Thyroid
ultrasonography and Thallium (Tl201)-technetium (Tc99m) subtraction scan showed parathyroid adenoma in the low pole of the right thyroid bed. Parathyroid aspiration cytology revealed few and discrete cells. Echocardiogram revealed moderate to severe aortic valvular calcification as well as stenosis with moderate aortic regurgitation, mitral regurgitation and myocardial calcification. The patient received parathyroidectomy one month later. During his postoperative days, he suffered from muscle twitching with positive Trousseau's sign and Chvostek's sign. The patient received calcium carbonate and vitamin D for hypocalcemia, diltiazem and capoten for his heart problems. A repeated echocardiogram two months after surgery showed no improvement of valvular calcification.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism with cardiac abnormalities: a case report. 950 84
Parathyroid carcinoma is a rare clinical entity with a reported incidence of between 0.5% and 4% of all patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
. Equally as unusual is the presence of an intrathyroidal parathyroid gland, which is usually found at the time of exploration by exclusion after extensive dissection has been performed in the usual anatomic locations for the parathyroid glands. This is the description of a case of intrathyroidal parathyroid cancer that presented as
primary hyperparathyroidism
with a left neck mass. On exploration, an enlarged left lobe of the thyroid was present and no left superior pole parathyroid gland was found with exploration. A left thyroid lobectomy was performed that confirmed a parathyroid cancer that was entirely intrathyroidal. This is the first known reported case in the literature of a carcinoma arising within the thyroid gland.
Thyroid
1998 Jul
PMID:Intrathyroidal parathyroid cancer presenting as a left neck mass. 970 13
Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN 2) is a rare syndrome of medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) with pheochromocytoma and/or
primary hyperparathyroidism
(
PHP
), usually due to multigland hyperplasia. MEN 2 is associated with several RET protooncogene mutations. A 61-year-old woman with a family history of RET-positive MTC presented with a solitary thyroid nodule. Fine-needle aspiration biopsy was suspicious for neoplasm. Biochemical studies revealed basal hypercalcitoninemia (116 pg/mL [normal <26]) and
PHP
(serum calcium, 10.9 mg/dL; intact PTH, 113.2 pg/mL [10.0-65.0]). Pheochromocytoma screening was negative. A provisional diagnosis of MEN 2 was made, but at surgery, a single parathyroid adenoma was resected and frozen sections of several lymph nodes revealed papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC). A total thyroidectomy was performed. Final histological diagnosis was PTC and parathyroid adenoma with no evidence of MTC. Postoperatively, RET mutation testing was positive. The basal calcitonin (CT) fell to 25 pg/mL, but peaked at 935 (normal <105) after pentagastrin infusion, consistent with occult MTC. After radioiodine ablation, CT decreased further. Octreotide scanning was negative. Faced with
PHP
, a thyroid nodule, and a family history of MTC, clinicians tend to diagnose MEN 2. This patient had a single parathyroid adenoma and nonmedullary thyroid cancer, which the literature actually suggests to be an association more frequent than MEN 2. Yet, there remains compelling data in favor of occult MTC, leaving open the possibility of an MEN 2 variant with the rare association of PTC.
Thyroid
1998 Sep
PMID:Papillary thyroid carcinoma, parathyroid adenoma, and unexplained hypercalcitoninemia: an unusual presentation of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2A? 977 49
The authors reported a twelve year and four-month old girl who had prolonged fever for 2 weeks. Physical examination revealed a painless enlarged thyroid gland with firm consistency. Hyperparathyroidism was suspected because of hypercalcemia, hypophosphatemia, high level of serum alkaline phosphatase, and decreased density of long bones.
Thyroid
scan showed a cold nodule of the left upper lobe which subsequently proved to be a medullary thyroid carcinoma by high serum thyrocalcitonin level and pathological examination. Her 24-hour urinary vanillyl mandelic acid was in the normal range, and abdominal ultrasonography demonstrated normal adrenal glands. Multiple endocrine neoplasia type IIa (MEN IIa) was diagnosed by medullary thyroid carcinoma and hyperparathyroidism. However, the fully developed syndrome is characterized by the combined occurrence of medullary thyroid carcinoma,
primary hyperparathyroidism
, and pheochromocytomas. This syndrome is a rare, complex, and potentially lethal disease so early recognition and family screening are very important.
...
PMID:Multiple endocrine neoplasia type IIa: a case report. 980 71
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