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Query: UMLS:C0221002 (
primary hyperparathyroidism
)
4,921
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An asymptomatic 11-year-old boy was found to have primary hyperparathyroid secondary to an isolated parathyroid adenoma. This rare disorder of childhood can have asymptomatic hypercalcemia as its only manifestation.
Parathyroid hormone
assays and studies of urinary calcium excretion, especially the calcium-creatinine clearance ratio, distinguish parathyroid hormone excess from hypocalciuric forms of hypercalcemia. Real-time ultrasonography and dual-isotope subtraction scanning provide accurate, noninvasive, preoperative localization of abnormal parathyroid tissue. The prognosis of untreated, asymptomatic
primary hyperparathyroidism
in children is not known, and the indications for surgery are unclear. Diagnostic certainty is, therefore, especially important prior to surgical exploration.
...
PMID:Asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism in children. Newer methods of preoperative diagnosis. 352 97
The records of 100 patients operated on for
primary hyperparathyroidism
, from Jan 21, 1982 to June 11, 1984, were reviewed. In each patient, hypercalcemia had been documented on at least two separate occasions. A history, physical examination, chest roentgenogram, complete blood cell count with differential, 18-factor automated blood chemistry analysis, and urinalysis were used to screen for other causes of hypercalcemia. Of the 100 patients who had surgery, 88 had a preoperative parathyroid hormone level determination. Preoperative parathyroid hormone levels were normal in 41% of patients with parathyroid disease demonstrated at surgery.
Parathyroid hormone
assays produce variable results even from the best laboratories. A serum calcium determination remains the best test for diagnosing
primary hyperparathyroidism
.
...
PMID:Parathyroid hormone assay. Unreliable and overused. 371 18
The performance and clinical utility of a 'C-terminal' parathyroid hormone (PTH) radioimmunoassay (Dac-Cel, Wellcome Diagnostics) is described.
Parathyroid hormone
, as measured by the Dac-Cel method, is stable in whole blood samples for at least 24 h. 84% of patients with hypercalcaemia due to
primary hyperparathyroidism
have values above the upper limit seen in normocalcaemic subjects (0.5 micrograms/L), with detectable serum PTH demonstrable in the remaining 16%. In patients with hypocalcaemia due to hypoparathyroidism serum PTH was undetectable in 73% and 'inappropriately' low in the remainder. In 50% of patients with malignancy-associated hypercalcaemia serum PTH was undetectable, but was above 0.5 micrograms/L in 13%. Increased PTH concentrations were invariably found in patients with renal failure. The Dac-Cel method is a reliable and robust technique for measurement of PTH and in conjunction with determination of calcium facilitates the diagnosis of primary parathyroid disorders. Caution is required in the interpretation of PTH measurements in patients with renal failure; the significance of detectable PTH in some patients with malignancy-associated hypercalcaemia is not clear.
...
PMID:Performance and clinical utility of a commercially available 'C-terminal' PTH assay. 376 72
Parathyroid hormone
is mainly regulated by the serum calcium concentration and not by another hormone which is usually the case for other hormones. We examined whether the parathyroid hormone could also be regulated by a hormone such as adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH). Experiment I: A two-hour urine sample was collected from 6 AM to 8 AM. At 8 AM one mg of synthetic ACTH was injected intramuscularly. Blood and urine was collected two hours after the injection for determination of the concentration of serum calcium, phosphate, parathyroid hormone and cortisol. Experiment II: Adenoma tissue was obtained during operation from patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
. The adenoma was digested with trypsin. Eagle MEM containing 100 ml fetal calf serum per 500 ml medium was used as the culture medium. The specimens were incubated in an atmosphere of 95% air and 5% CO2. Several days later, 25 micrograms of ACTH was added to the medium which was then incubated for 2 hours. The parathyroid hormone in the medium was measured by radioimmunoassay. Experiment III:ACTH was injected intraperitoneally into control male rats and parathyroidectomized rats. Two hours later, serum calcium and parathyroid hormone levels were measured. After ACTH injection, a remarkable increase in serum calcium level was seen in the patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
, but in the other groups, no increase in the serum calcium was observed.
Parathyroid hormone
was increased after ACTH injection in most subjects in all groups. Serum cortisol levels increased markedly after ACTH injection in all groups. The parathyroid concentration in the culture medium was slightly increased after ACTH addition.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Endocrinological characteristic of primary hyperparathyroidism]. 609 27
Because prominent skeletal muscle dysfunction and muscle wasting are seen in both chronic uremia and in
primary hyperparathyroidism
, and because markedly elevated parathyroid hormone levels occur in both disorders, potential effects of parathyroid hormone on skeletal muscle protein, amino acid, and cyclic nucleotide metabolism were studied in vitro using isolated intact rat epitrochlearis skeletal muscle preparations. Intact bovine parathyroid hormone and the synthetic 1-34 fragment of this hormone stimulated the release of alanine and glutamine from muscle of control but not from chronically uremic animals. This stimulation was dependent upon the concentration of parathyroid hormone added: At 10(5) ng/ml parathyroid hormone increased alanine release 84% and glutamine release 75%. Intracellular levels of alanine and glutamine were not altered by parathyroid hormone. Increasing concentrations of the 1-34 polypeptide decreased [(3)H]leucine incorporation into protein of muscles from both control and uremic animals. Using muscles from animals given a pulse-chase label of [guanido-(14)C]arginine in vivo, parathyroid hormone increased the rate of loss of (14)C label from acid-precipitable protein during incubation and correspondingly increased the rate of appearance of this label in the incubation media.
Parathyroid hormone
increased muscle cAMP levels by 140% and cGMP levels by 185%, but had no effect on skeletal muscle cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase activities as assayed in vitro. Adenylyl cyclase activity in membrane preparations from control but not uremic rats was stimulated by parathyroid hormone in a concentration-dependent fashion. However, no stimulation of guanylyl cyclase activity was noted by parathyroid hormone, although stimulation by sodium azide was present. Incubation of muscles with added parathyroid hormone produced a diminished responsiveness towards epinephrine or serotonin regulation of amino acid release and cAMP formation in the presence compared to the absence of parathyroid hormone. In the absence of parathyroid hormone, detectable inhibition of alanine and glutamine release was produced by 10(-9) M epinephrine, whereas in the presence of parathyroid hormone (1,000 ng/ml) inhibition of alanine and glutamine release required 10(-6) M or greater epinephrine. Resistance to cyclic AMP action as well as inhibition of cyclic AMP formation by parathyroid hormone was found. Preincubation of rat sarcolemma with 1-34 parathyroid hormone produced a decreased activity of the isoproterenol-stimulable adenylyl cyclase activity but there was no apparent change in the concentration of isoproterenol required for one-half maximal and maximal stimulation of the enzyme. These findings suggest that high levels of parathyroid hormone have direct effects on skeletal muscle protein, amino acid, and cyclic nucleotide metabolism in muscle of normal but not uremic animals. Treatment with these high levels of parathyroid hormone in vitro appears to reproduce in normal muscle, the metabolic deficits and loss of hormone responsiveness observed in muscle of chronically uremic animals. It is therefore possible that direct effects of parathyroid hormone on skeletal muscle may account in part for the muscle dysfunction and wasting of
primary hyperparathyroidism
and chronic uremia.
...
PMID:Effects of parathyroid hormone on skeletal muscle protein and amino acid metabolism in the rat. 630 55
Parathyroid hormone
is concerned with urolithiasis, and regulated by serum ionized calcium concentration. We thought that parathyroid hormone might also be regulated by a hormone. 1 mg of ACTH injection was given intramuscularly to 6 patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
, 6 patients with urolithiasis, and 5 control subjects. Serum calcium significantly increased 2 h after ACTH injection in
primary hyperparathyroidism
. However in the other two groups, an increase of serum calcium was not observed.
Parathyroid hormone
increased after ACTH injection in most subjects of all three groups. Calcium concentration in a culture medium of parathyroidectomy increased in 4 cases, and the parathyroid hormone concentration in the culture medium increased in 3 cases after ACTH addition. From these data, we believe that ACTH directly influences the parathyroid glands, and that calcium is released from the parathyroid cells. Therefore, the decrease in calcium concentration in the parathyroid cells activates the excretion of parathyroid hormone. The fact that serum parathyroid hormone increases in most subjects in all groups supports our hypothesis, namely that ACTH acts directly on the parathyroid gland.
...
PMID:Relation between parathyroid hormone and adrenocorticotropic hormone in primary hyperparathyroidism. 632 18
In 72 cases of
primary hyperparathyroidism
, selective venous catheterization was performed preoperatively to localize parathyroid adenomas. Diagnosis of
primary hyperparathyroidism
was proved by operation in all but 5 cases, in which no adenomas could be found intraoperatively. By venous catheterization of the neck and upper region of the thorax, an average of 10 blood samples per patient were taken.
Parathyroid hormone
was estimated by radioimmunoassay with high sensitivity against the intact PTH-molecule and carboxy-terminal fragments. Only in 24 out of 72 cases was localization of parathyroid adenomas prognosticated correctly with respect to side and height, while in a total of 38 cases localization on the right or left side only could be determined preoperatively. These unsatisfactory results can be improved only by a much more extensive catheterization technic which would be justified only in patients already operated on before without success. The final evaluation of non-invasive methods, e.g. ultrasonics and computerized tomography, is still under discussion.
...
PMID:[Preoperative localization diagnosis of parathyroid adenomas in 72 cases of primary hyperparathyroidism by selective catheterization of neck veins and parathyroid hormone determination]. 686 53
Thirty-nine patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
were studied four to eight years after their initial operation. In six patients, both the pathologist and surgeon agreed on the diagnosis of solitary adenoma; in 16 patients, the surgeon diagnosed solitary adenoma and the pathologist parathyroid hyperplasia (microscopic hyperplasia). In 16 patients, primary chief cell hyperplasia was agreed upon by the pathologist and surgeon. In the 16 patients with microscopic hyperplasia, there have been no long-term recurrences of hypercalcemia, but, in two patients, plasma parathyroid hormone levels are high.
Parathyroid hormone
--total calcium regression curves demonstrate significant preoperative correlation in solitary adenoma, p less than 0.01, and primary chief cell hyperplasia, p less than 0.05. After operation, significant correlations were not found between parathyroid hormone and total calcium. T-testing slope differences of pre- and postoperative parathyroid hormone--total calcium regression curves demonstrates a significant (p less than 0.01) shift to the right of the microscopic hyperplasia patients after operation, moving them to a broader range of total calcium per picogram parathyroid hormone. We conclude that 1) in
primary hyperparathyroidism
, positive regulation of total calcium by autonomously released parathyroid hormone exists in patients with solitary adenoma and chief cell hyperplasia; 2) autonomously functioning parathyroid tissue has been removed by operation for solitary adenoma with coexistent microscopic parathyroid hyperplasia. In this four- to eight-year follow-up period, it is clear that microscopic parathyroid hyperplasia is not associated with recurrent hypercalcemia. Two functionally distinct forms of parathyroid suppression are suggested; positively regulated microscopic hyperplasia and negatively regulated pathologically suppressed glands.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism: four- to eight-year postoperative follow-up demonstrating persistent functional insignificance of microscopic parathyroid hyperplasia and decreased autonomy of parathyroid hormone release. 728 4
Following the third operation, aparathyroidism occurred in a 70-year-old female with
primary hyperparathyroidism
due to parathyroid hyperplasia. Part of the parathyroid obtained during the last operation was cryopreserved immediately after resection and replanted successfully after 15 days into the lower arm muscles. The function of the transplanted tissue was demonstrated by successful stepwise reduction of hormone substitution.
Parathyroid hormone
concentrations in the blood of the veins draining the transplanted tissue were more than double in comparison with the contralateral side. Functional and morphological investigations of the defrosted tissue prior to transplantation showed vitality and intact morphology.
...
PMID:[Autotransplantation of cryopreserved human parathyroid tissue (author's transl)]. 747 68
Parathyroid hormone
(
PTH
) is a linear peptide of 84 amino acids that is found in serum mainly in the form of carboxyl-terminal fragments. The biological activity of
PTH
depends on the presence of the amino-terminal portion and in circulation is limited to the intact molecule. We describe an immunofluorometric assay for the measurement of
PTH
-(1-84) based on a chicken egg yolk-derived amino-terminal antibody bound to microtiter plates by an anti-chicken Ig monoclonal antibody. As tracer antibody we employed a Europium-labelled carboxyl-terminal specific monoclonal antibody produced from a mouse immunized with hPTH-(53-84)-BSA conjugate. The assay included an initial overnight incubation of the sample and the solid phase-bound amino-terminal antibody, followed by washing and addition of the tracer antibody, and an additional two hours of incubation prior to fluorescence reading. The least-detectable dose was in the order of 2.5 pg/ml and preliminary studies in 40 normal adults showed values in the range of 4 to 70 pg/ml; for 12 patients with surgery-proven
primary hyperparathyroidism
values ranged from 109 to 743 pg/ml and for 34 patients with humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy from 2.5 to 66 pg/ml. We conclude that this assay, with its increased sensitivity and specificity, will be a valuable tool in the study of
PTH
secretion in normal and pathological situations.
...
PMID:Development and clinical application of an immunofluorometric assay for intact parathyroid hormone. 764 Jun 27
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