Cases reported "Parathyroid Neoplasms"

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1/4. Giant mediastinal parathyroid adenoma with hypercalcemia.

    Parathyroid disease is uncommon, but when found it is always of interest to the physician. Most patients with parathyroid disease also have hypercalcemia. Benign adenomatous disease is the most frequent surgical parathyroid lesion seen. Most of these lesions occur in the neck and are usually <2 cm in diameter. We report the case of a 50-year-old patient with familial neurofibromatosis, a serum calcium of 19 mg/dl, nephrocalcinosis, and renal failure. Evaluation revealed a large (5.7 x 4.5 x 2.9-cm) mediastinal adenoma. At resection, the tumor weighed 39.5 g. Symptomatology rapidly improved postoperatively.
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2/4. A thoracoscopically resected case of mediastinal parathyroid cyst.

    A 67-year-old male visited his physician because of a 2-month history of cough and sputum. An abnormal shadow at the left upper mediastinum on chest x-ray film was detected, and the patient was referred to our department for further examination. Chest x-ray film revealed a round shadow at the left upper posterior mediastinum. Computed tomography(CT)revealed a uniform iso density mass about 4 cm in diameter, with a well-defined border. After the intravenous contrast administration, a slight peripheral enhancement was seen around the mass. On magnetic resonance imaging, the mass was hypointense in T1-weighting and hyperintense in T2-weighting. The contrast pattern was the same as that observed in the CT scan. On sagittal and coronal sections, the mass was adjacent to the aortic arch. Although a benign tumor was mostly suspected based on imaging findings, a malignant tumor was also possible. Accordingly, we resected this mass with video-assisted thoracoscopy. Findings at operation were a cystic mass. The pathological findings were compatible with benign parathyroid cyst, which was suspected to be the cystic degeneration of a parathyroid adenoma.
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3/4. carcinoma of the parathyroid gland: is it overdiagnosed? A report of three cases.

    The true incidence of carcinoma of the parathyroid gland is probably about 1 percent of cases of primary hyperparathyroidism. Overreporting may occur if the diagnosis is based on histologic appearances alone because the histologic criteria are less than definitive. carcinoma of the parathyroid gland, if diagnosed early and treated with adequate surgical excision, is associated with a satisfactory long-term prognosis. However, the possibility of distant metastases or locally recurrent disease is not necessarily excluded by a prolonged interval of disease-free status, and the physician should continue to follow the patient on a regular basis by physical examination and routine serum calcium analysis.
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4/4. osteomalacia secondary to celiac disease, primary hyperparathyroidism, and Graves' disease.

    Primary hyperparathyroidism is seldom associated with other autoimmune disorders. The presence of normocalcemia in primary hyperparathyroidism should prompt the physician to look for vitamin d deficiency. This observation concerns a 34-year-old vegetarian woman with combined primary hyperparathyroidism, Graves' disease, and celiac disease. The patient presented with severe bone deformities; she was unable to walk, and had severe muscular weakness and weight loss. Biochemical findings revealed severe hyperparathyroidism with normocalcemia, hypophosphatemia, very low urinary calcium, and low 25-hydroxy vitamin D level. Thyroid tests showed hyperthyroidism with positive thyroid receptor antibodies, confirming the presence of Graves' disease. Positive antigliadin and antireticulin antibodies and complete villous atrophy on duodenal biopsy established the presence of celiac disease. The patient underwent a near-total thyroidectomy, with the removal of a parathyroid adenoma. To our knowledge, this observation is the first finding of an association between celiac disease, Graves' disease, and primary hyperparathyroidism. It emphasizes the need to rule out intestinal malabsorption in the case of normocalcemic hyperparathyroidism.
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