Results 161 to 170 of about 47,980 (197)
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Nephrolithiasis and Hyperparathyroidism
Hospital Practice, 1982Some patients with primary hyperparathyroidism develop kidney stones; others, bone disease. The dichotomy is explained by a bihormonal pathophysiology.
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Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2018
Primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT), the most common cause of hypercalcemia, is most often identified in postmenopausal women with hypercalcemia and parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels that are either frankly elevated or inappropriately normal. The clinical presentation of PHPT includes three phenotypes: target organ involvement of the renal and skeletal ...
Barbara C, Silva +2 more
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Primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT), the most common cause of hypercalcemia, is most often identified in postmenopausal women with hypercalcemia and parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels that are either frankly elevated or inappropriately normal. The clinical presentation of PHPT includes three phenotypes: target organ involvement of the renal and skeletal ...
Barbara C, Silva +2 more
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Hyperparathyroidism and Pancreatitis
JAMA, 1962This paper supports the hypothesis that the concomitance of hyperparathyroidism and pancreatitis is more than coincidental, and that there is some etiologic relationship between the 2 conditions. Study of a patient described in detail in this report and of 26 other patients mentioned in the literature suggests that some cases of pancreatitis are ...
J J, TURCHI +4 more
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Hyperparathyroidism in the elderly
The American Journal of Surgery, 1980Primary hyperparathyroidism seems to be increasing in incidence in elderly patients. Their symptoms are somewhat different from those encountered in younger patients, the most striking difference being the increase in the number of patients with mental changes. Twenty-nine patients, 23 women and 6 men, were treated at two community hospitals.
H, Mannix +3 more
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Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America
Secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) does not initiate as a primary dysfunction of parathyroid glands resulting from an intrinsic defect or disease but is the physiologic response of parathyroids to metabolic changes elsewhere in the body occurring over time.
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Secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) does not initiate as a primary dysfunction of parathyroid glands resulting from an intrinsic defect or disease but is the physiologic response of parathyroids to metabolic changes elsewhere in the body occurring over time.
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Pathophysiology of Hyperparathyroidism
Hormone Research, 2008JLH O'Riordan, ADAMI, Silvano
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