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Query: UMLS:C0221002 (
primary hyperparathyroidism
)
4,921
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A study was undertaken to investigate the behavior of 99mTc-Sn-pyrophosphate complex in metabolic bone disease. Of clinical importance was the generalized increased periarticular bone accumulation of the radiopharmaceutical in osteomalacia and in combined osteomalacia and osteitis fibrosa as found in patients with
chronic renal failure
. The pattern in
primary hyperparathyroidism
was variable. There was no correlation between the initial rates of accumulation of the radiophosphate complex or its bone to soft-tissue uptake ratio at 5 hr when compared with the degree of osteomalacia and osteitis fibrosa. It is postulated that the 99mTc-Sn-pyrophosphate complex has greater affinity for immature collagen than the crystal surface.
...
PMID:Technetium-99m-pyrophosphate kinetics and imaging in metabolic bone disease. 16 46
1. Normal subjects showed a highly reproducible, rapid increase in plasma adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) after an intravenous injection of 200 MRC units of highly purified bovine parathyroid hormone. 2. No significant increase in plasma cyclic AMP was observed after administration of bovine parathyroid hormone to patients with severe
chronic renal failure
. 3. Even when renal function was not impaired, some patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
, who had high concentrations of endogenous parathyroid hormone, showed resistance to bovine parathyroid hormone and when this was injected intravenously it caused only a small increase in plasma cyclic AMP. This resistance was reversible since there was marked improvement in the response after parathyroidectomy, when endogenous parathyroid hormone concentration had fallen. 4. It was possible to reproduce this resistance to the hormone by intravenous infusion of bovine parathyroid hormone into normal subjects. When the hormone (1000 MRC units) was infused over 2 h, after an initial increase there was a progressive decline in plasma cyclic AMP concentration and a fall in urinary cyclic AMP excretion. The response to a standard test stimulus (200 MRC units of bovine parathyroid hormone given as a rapid intravenous injection) was examined at intervals after 1000 units of bovine parathyroid hormone had been infused. Initially, the response was severely impaired; at 4 h, partial recovery had occurred and, 24 h after the infusion, recovery of the response was complete. The resistance was therefore reversible. Infusion of the amino-terminal peptide, fragment 1-34, gave the same effect as infusion of intact hormone. Region-specific assays for the hormone were used to show that the concentration of immuno-assayable hormone remained high during the infusions. 5. The mechanism of this reversible resistance to parathyroid hormone remains to be elucidated; it seems unlikely that circulating hormone fragments could account for the prolonged impairment in the responsiveness to the intact hormone. It is possible that alteration in the formation, intracellular degradation or, perhaps, release of cyclic AMP from the cells, is the cause. Changes in the characteristics of the hormone receptor sites might also explain the phenomenon.
...
PMID:Reversible resistance to the renal action of parathyroid hormone in man. 18 Nov 94
A sensitive radioreceptor assay for 1alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1alpha,25-(OH)2D3) is utilized to quantitate the circulating concentration of this sterol in experimental animals and humans. When weanling rats are grown for 2 weeks on low calcium or low phosphate diets, limited availability of either ion elicits a five-fold increase in the plasma level of 1alpha,25-(OH)2D3. The enhancement of 1alpha,25-(OH)2D3 in calcium deficiency is dependent upon the presence of the parathyroid and/or thyroid glands, which is consistent with parathyroid hormone (PTH) mediation of this effect. In contrast, the response to phosphate deficiency is independent of these glands and may result from a direct action of low phosphate on the renal synthesis of 1alpha,25-(OH)2D3. Studies in humans indicate that the normal level of 1alpha,25-(OH)2D is 2.1--4.5 ng/100 ml plasma. Patients with
chronic renal failure
have markedly lower circulating 1alpha,25-(OH)2D and this kidney hormone is undetectable in anephric subjects, but returns to normal within 1 day after successful renal transplantation. Hypoparathyroidism and pseudohypoparathyroidism are associated with reduced plasma 1alpha,25-(OH)2D while patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
have significantly elevated sterol hormone levels. Thus, from measurements in rats and humans, it appears that circulating 1alpha,25-(OH)2D3 is regulated by PTH and/or phosphate and that abnormal plasma 1alpha,25-(OH)2D3 is a part of the pathophysiology of renal osteodystrophy and parathyroid disorders.
...
PMID:The assay of 1alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3: physiologic and pathologic modulation of circulating hormone levels. 21 27
Pancreatitis has been described previously following renal transplantation, but not in association with
chronic renal failure
. Analysis of 168 patients with renal transplants revealed five who developed pancreatitis, three of whom died. All five were on treatment with prednisone and azathioprine. Four patients were seen with definite attacks of pancreatitis and chronic, stable renal failure from a variety of causes. None had received immunosuppressive agents, prednisone nor thiazide diuretics, but two were on regular frusemide. One patient was on maintenance dialysis, which could not be related directly to the pancreatitis. In either group alcohol ingestion, cholethiathiasis, or hypercalcaemia was not a factor. This diagnosis of pancreatitis was established on clinical grounds and serum amylast levels of greater than 900 iu/1. Similar serum amylast elevation was not found ina random group of patients with
chronic renal failure
. Hyperlipidaemia was not present in any patient with pancreatitis. Although hypercalcaemia and
primary hyperparathyroidism
was not found in the transplant and non-transplant subjects, elevated serum parathormone levels have been described in uraemic patients with normocalcaemia. Hyperparathyroidism may be a factor in the development of pancreatitis in reanl failure. Pancreatitis carries a significant mortality risk in renal transplantation. The four non-transplanted patients have survived, despite recurrent attacks of pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Pancreatitis and renal disease. 31 21
The amounts of total hydroxyproline (THP), free hydroxyproline (FHP) and non-dialysable hydroxyproline (NDHP) excreted in the urine by six patients with
chronic renal failure
who received kidney transplants and six patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
were studied. Following transplantation three of the four patients with radiological evidence of hyperparathyroidism developed hypercalcaemia and excreted more than 360 mumol THP/24 hours on at least one occasion. The remaining patients were normocalcaemic and excreted less THP and a higher proportion of NDHP. In all patients with
primary hyperparathyroidism
, THP excretion fell after adenoma removal but there was an increased excretion of NDHP:THP. It is suggested that studies of hydroxyproline excretion may contribute to clinical assessment of healing of renal osteodystrophy and involution of the parathyroid glands after renal allograft transplantation.
...
PMID:Hydroxyproline excretion following renal transplantation: comparison with values found in primary hyperparathyroidism. 34 3
The authors assessed the surface areas of osteocytic lacunae in non-decalcified bone sections using a histomorphometric method involving a device with an adaptable drawing on the microscope and a graduated sheet. In 7 cases of
primary hyperparathyroidism
proven surgically and in 8 cases of hyperparathyroidism secondary to
chronic renal failure
, there was significant periosteocytic enlargement in comparison with a group of 7 controls. This method involving non-decalcified bone sections makes it possible to use the same slides as for the quantitative study of bone volumes, and osteoid, osteoclastic and fibrous surface areas. It is thus of great interest in the positive histological diagnosis of hyperparathyroidism.
...
PMID:[Morphometric evaluation of osteoclasts in non-decalcified bone sections. Its value in the diagnosis of hyperparathyroidism]. 49 82
1. The distribution of intact parathyroid hormone-(1-84) [PTH-(1-84)] and of its COOH-terminal fragments was determined in human serum by column chromatography. In addition to PTH-(1-84) (peak I), COOH-terminal fragments having molecular weights of approximately 4000-7000 (peak II) and immunoreactive components co-eluting with human PTH-(1-12) (peak III) were observed. 2. Mean concentrations of intact PTH-(-84) and of its COOH-terminal fragments were significantly raised in
chronic renal failure
as compared with those of normal subjects. Mean amounts of peak II were higher in patients with chronic renal insufficiency than in nutritional vitamin D deficiency, in pseudohypoparathyroidism and in
primary hyperparathyroidism
, despite comparable amounts of PTH-(1-84). 3. In
chronic renal failure
as well as in a group of patients with vitamin D deficiency, pseudohypoparathyroidism and
primary hyperparathyroidism
and in controls, significant linear relations were found between the serum concentrations of calcium and log (peak II/peak I). Our findings suggest that the conversion of intact PTH-(1-84) into COOH-terminal fragments by the parathyroid glands (resulting in a raised secretion of fragments) and/or in peripheral organs may be directly related to the serum concentration of calcium. However, the degradation of the fragments may also be suppressed in a calcium-dependent manner.
...
PMID:Distribution of circulating immunoreactive components of parathyroid hormone in normal subjects and in patients with primary and secondary hyperparathyroidism: the role of the kidney and of the serum calcium concentration. 51 52
Cysts of the parathyroid glands are uncommon, and functioning parathyroid cysts that cause
primary hyperparathyroidism
are rare. A 63-year-old man had
primary hyperparathyroidism
because of cystic hyperplasia of all four parathyroid glands. He also had squamous cell carcinoma of the soft palate,
chronic renal failure
, hypertension, type-4 renal tubular acidosis, a hyperplastic thyroid adenoma, and hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronism. To our knowledge, this is the first patient to be described with hyperparathyroidism due to multiple parathyroid cysts. The finding of cystic involvement of all four glands supports the theory that at least some parathyroid cysts are either a result of a common embryologic defect or of retention of parathyoid secretions rather than of cystic infarction of parathyroid adenomas.
...
PMID:Hyperparathyroidism due to primary cystic parathyroid hyperplasia. 65 52
Anemia has been recognized recently as a possible complication of
primary hyperparathyroidism
. If the hyperparathyroid state can induce anemia in patients with normal kidney function, the extremely high levels of circulating parathyroid hormone usually observed in hyperparathyroidism secondary to
chronic renal failure
may have an unfavorable influence on the anemia of uremic patients. We investigated the influence of subtotal parathyroidectomy on the severity of the anemia of 18 uremic subjects undergoing long-term hemodialysis therapy. Subtotal parathyroidectomy resulted in a significant increase of mean hematocrit value. RBC count, and hemoglobin level. Serial bone biopsies suggested a relationship between the amount of marrow fibrosis and the improvement of anemia after surgery, but the precise mechanism of this phenomenon is still unknown.
...
PMID:Anemia and secondary hyperparathyroidism. 71 13
A sensitive and simplified radioreceptor assay for 1, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1, 25-(OH)2D) in human plasma was described and applied to preliminary clinical studies. Tritium-labeled 1, 25-(OH)2D3 was produced by incubating chick kidney homogenate with tritium labeled 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 (25-OHD3). A cytosol receptor was obtained from rachitic chick intestine (Kd=5.3 X 10(-11) M). Lipids in 5 ml of heparinized human plasma were extracted with dichloromethane, and 1, 25-(OH)2D was isolated by a Sephadex LH-20 column followed by high pressure liquid column chromatography. Recovery of 1, 25-(OH)2D3 after the plasma extraction and chromatography ranged from 58 to 100%. The assay was sensitive to 5 pg/tube. Diluted plasma from a patient on a high dose of 1 alpha-OHD3 showed a dilution curve parallel to the standard curve. The cytosol receptor showed a cross reactivity to various vitamin D3 metabolites physiologically present in the circulation and it was thought to be essential to eliminate other vitamin D3 metabolites 1,25-(OH)2D from plasma samples by high pressure liquid chromatography. Plasma concentrations of 1, 25-(OH)2D were, in the case of most normal subjects, distributed from 7 to 33 pg/ml and the range of distribution became greater in relation to age, indicating that plasma values should be matched to age. Whereas markedly high values of 1, 25-(OH)2D in plasma were found in some cases of
primary hyperparathyroidism
with prominent bone resorption, relatively low values were seen in some patients with
chronic renal failure
, senile osteoporosis, osteomalacia and hypercalcemia due to bone metastasis.
...
PMID:Competitive protein binding assay for 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D in human plasma. 74 68
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