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)

Hypercalcemia calls first for supportive measures, eg, adequate hydration, movement or mobilization of the patient to the greatest amount tolerated, and reevaluation of drugs being taken. When immediate lowering of the serum calcium level is not clinically mandatory, oral administration of furosemide, corticosteroid, or phosphorus should be considered. In acute emergencies, saline loading and parenteral furosemide therapy should be tried first, except in a patient with renal failure and congestive heart failure, in whom peritoneal dialysis or hemodialysis should be used instead. Calcitonin can be given for the first 12 to 24 hours to lower serum calcium concentration until a definitive management plan is formulated. Corticosteroid, if not contraindicated, should be started as soon as possible. In severe primary hyperparathyroidism with hypophosphatemia, phosphorus can be given intravenously until oral phosphate therapy can be established. Surgery, of course, should be performed as soon as possible. In most cases of neoplasia, mithramycin given according to a recommended schedule is safe and frequently effective. In desperate cases, additional use of prostaglandin synthesis inhibitors probably now is justified by empirical observations. All of these therapeutic measures are used only to stabilize electrolyte balance so that the primary cause of the hypercalcemia can be treated.
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PMID:Management of hypercalcemia. 15 84

Calcium enters the pancreatic juice from two sources, one fraction associated with enzyme protein and another small fraction presumably by diffusion. The calcium concentration in pancreatic juice is lower than in plasma. It decreases with high flow rates and increases asymptotically to plasma concentration with low rates. In chronic pancreatitis calcium concentration is raised in the secretin-stimulated juice. After pancreozymin in moderate chronic pancreatitis it is low but in severe stages of the disease it is high signalling total dissociation from the entrance of enzyme protein, which is very low in these cases. Hypercalcemia stimulates enzyme secretion in the pancreas, hypocalcemia inhibits it. Calcium is essential for intracellular processes associated with secretion, the exact place in the sequence of "stimulus-secretion-coupling" still being unknown. Calcitonin as one of the hormones which regulates calcium homeostasis, inhibits secretion of enzymes but not of fluid and bicarbonate. The action of the parathyroid hormone on the exocrine pancreas is unknown. In primary hyperparathyroidism with chronic hypercalcemia acute and chronic pancreatitis occur 10 to 20 times more frequently than in the general population. In acute pancreatitis of whatever origin hypocalcemia is atypical feature of the disease indicating bad prognosis. The mechanism of its development is still unclear. In chronic pancreatitis the forming of calcified stones in the ducts is typical in cases associated with alcoholism, with protein malnutrition and with primary hyperparathyroidism. But it occurs also in cases with unknown etiology signalling a more general pathophysiological phenomenon. The calcium salts form a precipitate on protein plugs in the juice, which have been observed even in early stages of the disease in the small and larger ducts of the gland.
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PMID:The role of calcium in pancreatic secretion and disease. 77 77

Porcine or salmon calcitonin was given, as emergency treatment for 17 patients with hypercalcaemia, mostly of a severe degree. A lowering of serum calcium was achieved in all of 11 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism and in another 4 with malignancies. In most of the patients, the lowering of serum calcium level was accompanied by a pronounced clinical amelioration. This made possible successful parathyroidectomy without complications in the patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. In all patients except one, a decrease in serum creatinine was observed during treatment. Creatinine clearance was studied during calcitonin treatment in 2 patients and showed an increase. Calcitonin was ineffective in 2 of the patients with hypercalcaemia: one with plasmacell sarcoma of the lungs and another one with sarcoidosis. No serious side-effects were observed. Due to its quick action and lack of toxic effects, calcitonin is recommended when a prompt reduction of serum calcium is of vital importance.
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PMID:Acute treatment with calcitonin in primary hyperparathyroidism and severe hypercalcaemia of other origin. 117 65

Calcitonin is a hypocalcaemia producing hormone and is secreted by C-cells of the thyroid. The current study was undertaken on a hypothesis that C-cell hyperplasia may develop in the secondary hyperparathyroidism of chronic renal failure in response to sustained hypercalcaemia. With an immunoperoxidase staining method for calcitonin, C-cell hyperplasia was noted in four of six cases of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease and in three of six cases of acquired renal cystic disease, an overall incidence of 58% compared with an incidence of 36% (five of 14) in cases of primary hyperparathyroidism with parathyroid adenoma. Thus, both primary and secondary hyperparathyroidism may trigger C-cell hyperplasia in an attempt to produce a hypocalcaemic effect.
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PMID:C-cell hyperplasia in secondary hyperparathyroidism. 145 30

This study was conducted in order to establish whether C cells, which are responsible for secretion of calcitonin within the thyroid gland, change either in volume or morphology under conditions of chronic hypercalcemia in primary hyperparathyroidism. Out of 106 primary hyperparathyroid patients undergoing surgery, in 11 cases the thyroids were excised and examined for changes in the C cell. As a control group we used thyroids removed in another 14 cases undergoing thyroidectomy or laryngectomy. Calcitonin in the C cell was observed by optical microscope after immuno staining using the indirect peroxidase-labeled antibody technique. C cells are not evenly distributed within the thyroid. However, there is excellent positive correlation (p less than 0.001) between the C-cell index, which is the average of two tissue samples excised from the area at the border between the upper 1/3 and middle 1/3 of the thyroid lobe (the area where most C cells are found), and the total number of C cells. The C-cell index can thus be used as an indicator of the total number of C cells in the thyroid. The number of C cells decreased (p less than 0.01) as the level of calcium in serum increased. In patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, this decrease in C cells was significantly greater (p less than 0.025) than in the controls. Focal C cell hyperplasia and diffuse C cell hyperplasia were present in both the control group and primary hyperparathyroid group, but there was no significant difference between the two groups as to the frequency of occurrence. For both these conditions the rate of occurrence was considered within normal ranges for C cell morphology. We concluded that the decrease in C-cell count in primary hyperparathyroidism patients with chronic hypercalcemia is due to consumption of calcitonin in the C cell.
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PMID:[Immunohistochemical studies on the thyroid C-cells in primary hyperparathyroidism]. 176 Nov 42

A 57-year-old female was admitted to our hospital with general lassitude, loss of appetite, nausea, upper abdominal pain, thirst, polydipsia and polyuria. On admission, she had an asymmetrical pear-shaped tumor in the right supraclavicular region and severe hypercalcemia. Plasma C-PTH was elevated to 22.72ng/ml. Plasma calcitonin was also elevated to 336 pg/ml. She died of respiratory and cardiac failure of two weeks after admission without any positive response to the treatment, including hemodialysis. Pathohistologically, the tumor was a parathyroid adenoma. The concentrations of C-PTH, intact PTH and calcitonin in the tumor tissue were markedly high: 4.56 micrograms/g wet, 13.9 ng/g wet and 50.7 ng/g wet, respectively. Immunohistologically, the tumor cells and the fibrous stroma were stained strongly positive to rabbit anti-human calcitonin antibody and rabbit anti-human N-PTH antibody by indirect immunoperoxidase staining. Calcitonin-producing tumors, except for medullary thyroid carcinoma are rarely reported. To our knowledge, this is the first report of such a calcitonin-producing parathyroid adenoma associated with primary hyperparathyroidism.
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PMID:A case of calcitonin-producing parathyroid adenoma with primary hyperparathyroidism. 258 94

Calcitonin and its carboxyl-terminal flanking peptide (PDN-21), also encoded by the calcitonin gene, were measured by RIA in unextracted serum of normal subjects and patients with primary hyperparathyroidism and surgically verified and suspected medullary thyroid carcinoma. Serum PDN-21 was detectable (greater than 0.005 ngeq/ml) in the large majority of normal subjects (92%), and the values increased significantly more in men than women (4.8- and 2.0-fold, respectively; P less than 0.01) in response to 1-min iv calcium injections. Calcitonin was detectable (greater than 0.025 ngeq/ml) in only 25% of normal subjects before iv calcium and became measurable after iv calcium in 88% of men and 41% of women. In patients with chronic hypercalcemia due to primary hyperparathyroidism, PDN-21 and calcitonin were within normal limits. In normal subjects, iv pentagastrin (0.5 microgram/kg BW) did not increase PDN-21, and calcitonin remained undetectable. In 41 medullary thyroid carcinoma patients, basal PDN-21 and calcitonin levels were increased similarly, and they were stimulated in response to iv calcium or iv pentagastrin. In 5 siblings of medullary thyroid carcinoma patients, PDN-21 and calcitonin were increased in response to iv pentagastrin, and we suspect C-cell hyperplasia or medullary thyroid carcinoma. In conclusion, a diagnostically useful RIA for the measurement of PDN-21 in unextracted serum which complements calcitonin measurements has been developed.
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PMID:Diagnostic evaluation of measurements of carboxyl-terminal flanking peptide (PDN-21) of the human calcitonin gene in human serum. 390 67

Experimental studies have suggested that in primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) the cells of the hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue retain some capacity for stimulation and that an increase in secretion of parathyroid hormone (PTH) can occur when the extracellular calcium concentration is lowered within the hypercalcaemic range. We have tested this hypothesis in 23 patients with HPT, 10 patients with hypercalcaemia of other origin (7 of whom had disseminated malignant disease) and 17 normal subjects. In all three groups a single injection of 100 MRC units of salmon calcitonin caused a reduction in serum calcium of approximately 3 to 5%. In the hypercalcaemic patients this reduction was correlated to the basal calcium level (r = -0.57, P less than 0.01). In the patients with HPT, although they all remained hypercalcaemic, the decrease in serum calcium was associated with a mean increase in serum PTH of 10%. Only in 2 patients did such an increase fail to occur despite an adequate decrease in serum calcium. These 2 patients had high basal PTH levels and the lack of response might have been due to a high degree of autonomous parathyroid function. Calcitonin also reduced serum calcium and increased serum PTH in normal subjects. None of the patients with hypercalcaemia of other origin than primary HPT displayed a secretory PTH response to serum calcium reduction. Thus, this test could be of practical clinical value, particularly in patients with borderline PTH values. A calcitonin-induced rise in PTH while serum calcium is lowered within the hypercalcaemic range strongly suggests primary HPT.
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PMID:A stimulation test with calcitonin for differential diagnosis of hypercalcaemia. 649 90

Calcitonin (CT) plasma levels and urinary hydroxyproline (OHPr) excretion were studied in twenty-eight patients (eleven males and seventeen females) with primary hyperparathyroidism in order to ascertain the effect of CT secretion on the severity of bone disease. The results show that in primary hyperparathyroidism plasma CT levels are increased in about 50% of patients independent of sex. Plasma CT levels were correlated with serum calcium values in males but not in females. Urinary OHPr excretion values appeared higher in those patients which showed lower CT plasma levels. In this latter group the incidence of undetectable CT plasma values was higher in females. The results suggest that in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism the persistent challenge of CT secreting parafollicular cells due to chronic hypercalcemia, may induce a decrease in their functional reserve, and that the bone involvement may have a greater incidence and more severe course in females, due at least in part, for their inability to increase CT secretion as much as males, due to an intrinsic sex-related lower CT secretory reserve.
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PMID:Calcitonin secretion and bone disease severity in hypercalcaemic hyperparathyroidism. 730 85

No satisfactory medical therapy exists for the treatment of primary hyperparathyroidism. Calcitonin and diphosphonates do not give good long-term control. This work examines the efficacy of the somatostatin analogue octreotide in the management of hyperparathyroidism. Twenty-one patients were admitted before parathyroid surgery and were treated for 6 days with subcutaneous octreotide 100 micrograms twice daily. Fasting blood samples were taken for determination of serum levels of calcium and parathyroid hormone, and 24-h urinary calcium excretion was measured before and after treatment. A significant decrease in urinary calcium was demonstrated, but the reduction in serum calcium level was not statistically significant and there was no change in serum parathyroid hormone concentration. Octreotide may provide therapy for patients with hyperparathyroidism and for those who have undergone unsuccessful neck exploration or who are unfit for operation. It may ameliorate hypercalciuria and reduce stone formation. The octapeptide may also have a potential role as a diagnostic test in primary hyperparathyroidism by determining the symptomatic effect of reducing raised levels of serum and urinary calcium.
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PMID:Somatostatin and primary hyperparathyroidism. 795 42


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