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)

The causal relationship of primary hyperparathyroidism and ulcer disease is reviewed. In contrast to earlier ideas careful clinical and clinico-chemical investigations have shown that in patients with manifest primary hyperparathyroidism neither is the incidence of ulcer disease raised nor are deviations from the normal behavior of acid secretion or the serum gastrin level to be observed in comparison with the average population.
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PMID:[Peptic ulcer disease and primary hyperparathyroidism (author's transl)]. 11 10

A patient with metastatic islet cell carcinoma of the pancreas, recurrent peptic ulcer disease, and hypergastrinemia (Zollinger-Ellison syndrome) developed symptomatic hypercalcemia and renal insufficiency; she was treated with streptozotocin after parathyroidectomy failed to control her hypercalcemia. Shortly after somewhat less than the usual recommended dose of streptozotocin was administered, the serum calcium concentration fell to near normal with complete resolution of symptoms. Seven months after therapy, mild hypocalcemia, consistent with her degree of renal impairment was noted. However, mild hypercalcemia recurred 13 months after therapy. Shortly after streptozotocin therapy, the mean serum gastrin concentration fell to near normal with radiographic disappearance of the anastomotic ulcer. At 7 and 13 months after therapy, serum gastrin levels were normal. Streptozotocin therapy was accomplished without major complications; specifically, without a detrimental effect on the creatinine clearance. Thus, although hypercalcemia in patients with pancreatic islet cell tumors is often due to associated primary hyperparathyroidism, in some patients it may be due to secretion of a hypercalcemic substance from the tumor and may respond to streptozotocin. Similarly, hypergastrinemia in patients with islet cell tumors may also respond to streptozotocin.
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PMID:Pancreatic islet cell carcinoma with hypercalcemia and hypergastrinemia: response to streptozotocin. 13 70

In order to investigate the frequency of fasting hypergastrinaemia in primary hyperparathyroidism (A) and in chronic hypercalcaemia (B), in 40 and 16 patients respectively gastrin, parathyroid hormone (PTH) and serum calcium levels were measured and compared with those of a control group (40 subjects) with similar distribution of sex and age. Moreover, possible linear relationships between these parameters were investigated. Notwithstanding significant differences in calcium and PTH levels between the three groups (A: high PTH, high Ca++; B: low PTH, high Ca++; C: normal PTH and Ca++ levels), no significant difference in gastrin levels were found. However, in the first group, a marked increase of gastrin was observed in one patient, very probably affected by a gastrin-secreting tumor (positive secretin test). While no linear relationship between PTH and gastrin values was present in all the three groups, a significant correlation between serum calcium and fasting gastrin was detectable in the group A, ruling-out the above mentioned patient. Present data suggest that PTH does not modify gastrin levels and that chronic moderate hypercalcaemia does not raise serum fasting gastrin, at least in clinical conditions. Moreover, the frequency of hypergastrinaemia in hyperparathyroidism is very low and it seems to be present only in patients with gastrin-secreting tumors.
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PMID:Fasting serum gastrin in primary hyperparathyroidism and in chronic hypercalcemia. 54 29

In healthy controls (n = 7), patients with duodenal ulcer (n = 7), primary hyperparathyroidism (n = 7), and 1 case of excluded gastric antrum the effects of intravenous secretin ("Karolinska"; 3 U/kg/h for 90 min) upon serum calcium fractions, total protein, and the integrated response of gastrin and glucagon were investigated. In all groups total calcium, total protein, and protein-bound calcium fraction rose significantly but the inonized calcium fraction remained stable. Since serum concentration of gastrin and glucagon could not be altered in any of the groups a direct interference of these hormones with calcium homeostasis during secretin infusion can be ruled out. Hyperparathyroid patients had higher baseline glucagon values (209 +/- 30 pg/ml) than normals (127 +/- 6 pg/ml) and ulcer patients (138 +/- 11 pg/ml) and maintained a higher hormone output throughout the experiment. Together with data on the patient with excluded antral parts it is concluded that the hypercalcemic effect of secretin is not mediated by calcium-regulating hormones but must be of an unspecific nature.
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PMID:Studies on the calcemic effect of intravenous secretin in humans. 122 May 13

Hyperparathyroidism has been associated with an increased incidence of duodenal ulcer, increased acid secretion, and increased plasma gastrin levels. A relationship between these changes, increased serum calcium levels, and the increased incidence of peptic ulceration has been suggested, especially since increased plasma gastrin levels, serum calcium levels, and gastric acid secretion decrease after parathyroidectomy. We have previously suggested that the decrease in plasma gastrin levels after parathyroidectomy may suggest an extragastric source of gastrin, whereas others using immunofluorescent studies have suggested that the parathyroid adenomas themselves might be the source of this gastrin. We prospectively studied in fifteen patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, plasma gastrin and serum calcium levels before and after parathyroidectomy, as well as the gastrin content of parathyroid tumor tissue. The mean basal plasma gastrin level before operation was significantly greater than that of a control group and decreased insignificantly after operation, in contrast to serum calcium levels. No positive correlation could be found between plasma gastrin and serum calcium levels before and after operation. Parathyroid tumor tissue was assayed for gastrin content by radioimmunoassay and no detectable amounts of gastrin could be recovered from any tumor. The results do not support the concept that the extragastric source of gastrin in patients with hyperparathyroidism is the parathyroid adenoma itself.
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PMID:Plasma and parathyroid tumor tissue gastrin and hyperparathyroidism. 124 55

A total of 80 individuals in 4 kindreds with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN 1) have been subjected to repeated biochemical screening during a 10-yr period with the principal aim being to analyze characteristics of the developing pancreatic lesion. Age at presentation of the MEN 1 trait averaged 18 yr in 7 previously unaffected individuals, and this effect of the screening procedure represented a lowering by almost 2 decades. Pancreatic endocrine involvement was recognized at a mean age of 25 yr and constituted the presenting lesion in a majority of the patients. A standardized meal test and basal values of serum pancreatic polypeptide, insulin, proinsulin, and gastrin were the most efficient markers for the pancreatic lesion and preceded signs of pancreatic tumors upon radiological examinations by a mean of 3.5 yr. A 75% penetrance of the islet cell disease and 90% for primary hyperparathyroidism within the affected individuals equalled the prevalences reported in autopsy studies. Two of the kindreds showed signs of intrafamilial homogeneity with respect to the profile of peptide excess (P less than 0.05) and considerable discrepancy in the malignant potential of the pancreatic lesions. The results of early detection and surgical intervention of the pancreatic tumors in MEN 1 suggested an impact on morbidity, while any effect on the mortality of these individuals remains to be clarified.
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PMID:Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1: a 10-year prospective screening study in four kindreds. 167 62

A total of 79 consecutive patients with pituitary tumours were screened for multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN-1). The 79 patients included 21 patients with acromegaly, nine with Cushing's disease, 18 with prolactinomas, three with mixed pituitary adenomas (GH and PRL), and 28 patients with no detectable hypersecretion of hormones. The screening consisted of: (1) a family history, (2) a uniform medical history of the patient using a standard questionnaire, and (3) hormonal evaluation including measurements of the serum levels of insulin, gastrin, glucagon, somatostatin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and pancreatic polypeptide. Ionized calcium and glucose concentration in serum were also measured. We found no patients with the MEN-1 syndrome. In one patient, we found a transient elevation of serum concentrations of pancreatic polypeptide for which we have no explanation. In another patient, the serum gastrin concentration was elevated secondary to achlorhydria. No other endocrine disorders were found, and no patients had relatives with recognized endocrine pancreatic tumours, primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT), or pituitary adenomas.
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PMID:Screening for multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 in patients with recognized pituitary adenoma. 198 64

It is well known that primary hyperparathyroidism is often associated with peptic ulcer. The purpose of this study is to confirm the relationship between the gastrin-levels before and after parathyroidectomy in fourteen patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, and to determine the localization of gastrin in the surgically resected parathyroid tumor. The results obtained were as follows: 1) Three patients had peptic ulcer (gastric ulcer and duodenal ulcer), the incidence being 21%. 2) The basal serum gastrin levels were 123.0% +/- 68.1 pg/ml before operation and decreased to 90.2 +/- 44.5 pg/ml after operation. In the 3 patients with slightly elevated gastrin levels, the mean level before operation was 209.1 +/- 61.2 pg/ml. The gastrin level decreased to 116.4 +/- 62.0 pg/ml after operation. 3) Gastrin immunoreactivity was detected in 10 out of 14 tumors and its localization was at the periphery of tumor cells. From these results, we conclude that extragastric gastrin secretion from parathyroid tumors may be one of the cause of peptic ulcer in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.
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PMID:[Plasma and tumor gastrin in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism]. 232 10

The diagnosis of multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) in patients with presumed hyperparathyroidism has important ramifications for patient management especially since as many as 20% of patients with hyperparathyroidism may have associated MEN. Gut hormone levels were measured before and after surgery in 28 patients who underwent resection of a single parathyroid adenoma for biochemical or clinical evidence of hyperparathyroidism. The mean serum calcium level was 11.9 +/- 0.2 mg/dl before surgery and 9.3 +/- 0.3 mg/dl after surgery (p less than 0.001). Two or more hormone levels were elevated in 32% of patients before surgery and 21% after surgery. The same hormone abnormalities (pancreatic polypeptide [PP] and gastrin) occurred 56% of the time. Of elevated preoperative levels of PP, 91% were in the normal range after surgery. In patients with elevated preoperative PP levels, the postoperative level of PP decreased by an average of 64% of the preoperative level. In 27% of patients the level increased more than double the preoperative value. In two of four patients with high levels of PP after surgery the serum calcium level failed to fall. Of 18 patients whose PP levels fell, 17 had a fall in serum calcium levels. Of six patients whose PP levels rose, four had a significant fall in calcium levels. There was no correlation between the absolute levels or the decremental change of calcium and the change in PP. Several abnormalities in gut hormone secretion occur in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism and a parathyroid adenoma. An elevated serum level of PP does not signify MEN syndrome and must be reevaluated after resection of the parathyroid adenoma. Failure of adequate tumor resection is attended by persistent elevation of serum calcium and PP levels.
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PMID:Hyperparathyroidism and gastroenteropancreatic hormone levels. 241 70

Fundic argyrophil carcinoid tumors developed in the course of a 5-year continuous treatment with high dosages of H2-antagonists in a well-documented case of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome with primary hyperparathyroidism, high basal acid output, and serum gastrin. Approximately 100 small polyps were disseminated throughout the gastric fundus exclusively, leading to total gastrectomy. Metastatic carcinoid in a lymph node and pancreatic gastrinomas also were found at surgery. Gastric endocrine cell proliferation varied from simple argyrophil cell hyperplasia to carcinoid tumors eroding the surface and infiltrating the submucosa. Ultrastructural studies showed that the tumoral proliferation was heterogeneous, and included tumors composed of enterochromaffin (EC) and typical enterochromaffin-like (EC-L) cells, and tumors in which a majority of cells exhibited dense round granules resembling those of A-like or D1/P endocrine cell types. The risk of developing gastric fundic carcinoid tumors in ZES patients submitted to long-term antisecretory treatment should be given increased attention.
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PMID:Development of gastric argyrophil carcinoid tumors in a case of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome with primary hyperparathyroidism during long-term antisecretory treatment. 243 42


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