108 results on '"Mallette LE"'
Search Results
2. Rapid Radioimmunoassay for Parathyroid Hormone: Its Use in Hypercalcemic Crisis
- Author
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Coscia Am and Mallette Le
- Subjects
Adenoma ,Adult ,Male ,Parathyroidectomy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Fatal outcome ,Direct assessment ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Radioimmunoassay ,Urology ,Parathyroid hormone ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Retroperitoneal Neoplasms ,Aged ,business.industry ,Hyperparathyroidism ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Parathyroid Neoplasms ,Endocrinology ,Parathyroid Hormone ,Hypercalcemia ,Calcium ,Female ,Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse ,business ,Medical therapy ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
Patients with severe hypercalcemia often require intensive medical therapy to avoid a fatal outcome. When therapy with saline and loop diuretics cannot control the hypercalcemia, use of the toxic drug mithramycin is most appropriate for malignancy-associated hypercalcemia, but parathyroidectomy is indicated for parathyroid crisis. Although differentiation of these two syndromes is possible in many cases on clinical grounds, the determination of immunoreactive parathyroid hormone values provides a direct assessment of parathyroid function. Radioimmunoassay for parathyroid hormone has traditionally required four to seven days, but more rapid results would be desirable in this medical emergency. We report a modification of a previously published midregion-specific PTH assay that provides accurate results within 24 hours and describe its use in six patients with life-threatening hypercalcemia.
- Published
- 1984
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3. Hypercalcemia after acute renal failure
- Author
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Mallette Le and Silverman
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Oliguria ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Parathyroid hormone ,Calcium ,Absorption ,Prednisone ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Vitamin D and neurology ,Humans ,Serum Albumin ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Serum phosphate ,Metabolism ,Blood Proteins ,Acute Kidney Injury ,Middle Aged ,Endocrinology ,IL1A ,chemistry ,Parathyroid Hormone ,Hypercalcemia ,medicine.symptom ,business ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In a patient recovering from acute renal failure, hypercalcemia abruptly developed at a time when the serum creatinine level remained high (5 mg/dl) but well after the serum phosphate level had been restored to normal by oral aluminum hydroxide therapy. The renal damage had been severe, with oliguria lasting six weeks. Parathyroid hormone (PTH) immunoreactivity was measured with two different "carboxyterminal" PTH assays, giving high-normal or slightly mild renal failure could have accounted for the increased immunoreactivity. After five months of hypercalcemia, prednisone was administered and produced a prompt and sustained normalization of serum calcium. This prolonged variant of hypercalcemia after renal failure is not well recognized in the literature. The response to glucocorticoids suggests that abnormal metabolism of vitamin D or osteoclast activating factor might be involved in its genesis.
- Published
- 1980
4. Goat antisera to bovine parathyroid hormone: characterization of regional specificity, and evolution of titer and affinity of the 44-68 region-specific antibody species
- Author
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Mallette Le
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Antibody Affinity ,Dose-Response Relationship, Immunologic ,Parathyroid hormone ,Booster dose ,Biochemistry ,Epitope ,Epitopes ,Endocrinology ,Antigen ,Antibody Specificity ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Radioligand ,Animals ,Immunization Schedule ,Antiserum ,biology ,Chemistry ,Goats ,Biochemistry (medical) ,General Medicine ,Molecular biology ,Titer ,Kinetics ,Parathyroid Hormone ,biology.protein ,Cattle ,Antibody - Abstract
Antisera against crude native bovine parathyroid hormone (bPTH) were generated in domestic goats. After primary immunization with 60-200 mu g of bPTH, booster injections were given at intervals for 4 years. the resulting antisera contained antibodies directed against 3 regions of the PTH molecule, 1-34, 28-48 and 44-68. In animals the antibodies specific for the 44-68 were the most sensitive of the 3 types. Their titer and affinity were monitored serially by using (125)I-labeled bPTH-(41-84) as radioligand. Antigen doses as low as 2 mu g produced significant rises in titer, and titers after 3 mu g or 20 mu g doses were sometimes equal to or higher than after 100-160 mu g. The rise in titer after each boost produced an acute increase in affinity. The affinity also seemed to increase slowly during the interval between boosts. After the fifth booster dose these improvements were less marked. This maturation of antibody affinity in one animal led to an antiserum with sufficient sensitivity to hPTH to be useful in th diagnosis of hyperparathyroid states. These observations suggest that when antigenic recognition sites are looked at singly, the evolution of antibodies to PTH may not be as disorderly as had previously been thought. They also suggest an efficient method for obtaining sensitive antisera with a minimal expenditure of antigen.
- Published
- 1981
5. Financing health care for the poor
- Author
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Mallette Le
- Subjects
Economic growth ,Insurance, Health ,Poverty ,business.industry ,Medicaid ,Health care ,Health insurance ,Medicine ,General Medicine ,business ,United States - Published
- 1985
6. Acute hypocalcemic effects of clinical contrast media injections
- Author
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Berger, RE, primary, Gomez, LS, additional, and Mallette, LE, additional
- Published
- 1982
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7. Cyclic therapy of osteoporosis with neutral phosphate and brief, high-dose pulses of etidronate
- Author
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Mallette, LE, primary, LeBlanc, AD, additional, Pool, JL, additional, and Mechanick, JI, additional
- Published
- 1989
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8. A Vascular Vignette
- Author
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Mallette Le
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,business.industry ,Medicine ,General Medicine ,Plasma ,business ,Glucagon ,Amino acid - Published
- 1969
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9. Anticonvulsants, Acetazolamide and Osteomalacia
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Mallette Le
- Subjects
Osteomalacia ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,business ,Acetazolamide ,Dermatology ,medicine.drug - Published
- 1975
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10. A meaningless gesture.
- Author
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Mallette LE
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- Health Maintenance Organizations economics, Humans, Medicare, United States, Clinical Laboratory Techniques economics, Insurance, Health, Reimbursement
- Published
- 2004
11. Take the offensive.
- Author
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Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Humans, Patient Rights, Texas, Drug Prescriptions economics, Drugs, Generic economics, Legislation, Pharmacy economics
- Published
- 2002
12. Risedronate in the treatment of Paget's disease of bone: an open label, multicenter study.
- Author
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Siris ES, Chines AA, Altman RD, Brown JP, Johnston CC Jr, Lang R, McClung MR, Mallette LE, Miller PD, Ryan WG, Singer FR, Tucci JR, Eusebio RA, and Bekker PJ
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Alkaline Phosphatase blood, Biomarkers blood, Biomarkers urine, Calcium Channel Blockers administration & dosage, Capsules, Delayed-Action Preparations administration & dosage, Delayed-Action Preparations therapeutic use, Etidronic Acid administration & dosage, Etidronic Acid therapeutic use, Female, Gelatin, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Osteitis Deformans blood, Osteitis Deformans urine, Risedronic Acid, Calcium Channel Blockers therapeutic use, Etidronic Acid analogs & derivatives, Osteitis Deformans drug therapy
- Abstract
An open-label, multicenter study was conducted to determine the efficacy and safety of oral risedronate (a pyridinyl bisphosphonate) in 162 patients (102 men, 60 postmenopausal women; mean age, 68 years) with moderate to severe Paget's disease of bone (mean serum alkaline phosphatase [ALP] approximately seven times the upper limit of normal). Patients were treated with oral risedronate, 30 mg/day for 84 days, followed by 112 days without treatment. This 196-day cycle was repeated once if serum ALP did not normalize or increased from the nadir value by > or = 25%. At the end of the first and second cycles, the mean percentage decreases for serum ALP were 65.7% and 69.1%, and for urinary hydroxyproline/creatinine 50.4% and 66.9%, respectively. The decreases from baseline in ALP and urinary hydroxyproline/creatinine were significant (p < 0.001). Normalization of serum ALP was observed in 86 patients (53.8%): 53 during the first treatment cycle and 33 during the second. There was a significant proportion of patients reporting a decrease in the pagetic bone pain at days 84 and 196 (p < 0.001). Overall, risedronate was well tolerated. Five patients withdrew due to adverse events, none of which were considered to be drug related. In conclusion, 30 mg of oral risedronate administered daily for 84 days significantly reduced the biochemical indices of disease activity and was associated with pain reduction in patients with moderate to severe Paget's disease of bone. Normalization of ALP was observed in the majority of patients. Repeated administration of risedronate was shown to be beneficial. In general, risedronate was well tolerated and demonstrated a good safety profile.
- Published
- 1998
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13. Pseudohypoparathyroidism.
- Author
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Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Calcium therapeutic use, Humans, Pseudohypoparathyroidism complications, Pseudohypoparathyroidism drug therapy, Vitamin D therapeutic use, Pseudohypoparathyroidism therapy
- Published
- 1997
14. Case report: vitamin D-mediated hypercalcemia in fungal infections.
- Author
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Spindel SJ, Hamill RJ, Georghiou PR, Lacke CE, Green LK, and Mallette LE
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- AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections complications, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome metabolism, Adult, Calcitriol blood, Cryptococcosis complications, Humans, Hypercalcemia blood, Male, AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections metabolism, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome complications, Cryptococcosis metabolism, Hypercalcemia etiology, Vitamin D metabolism
- Abstract
Hypercalcemia has been well described in a variety of neoplastic and granulomatous diseases. One mechanism for this hypercalcemia is via the excess production of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D from extra-renal sources. The authors describe an AIDS patient infected with Cryptococcus neoformans who had suggestive evidence of vitamin D-mediated hypercalcemia. He had an elevated serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D value, a normal 25-hydroxyvitamin D value, and low values for parathyroid hormone and parathyroid hormone-related peptide. Most previously reported cases of hypercalcemia associated with fungal infections did not include sufficient evidence to implicate a role for excess 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D production, except for two case reports involving patients with hypercalcemia with infections due to Pneumocystis carinii and Candida albicans. The authors' patient's hypercalcemia resolved during treatment of his underlying infection. Patients with hypercalcemia or in whom hypercalcemia develops during a disseminated fungal infection should have vitamin D metabolites measured as part of their work-up.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
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15. Hereditary hyperparathyroidism-jaw tumor syndrome: the endocrine tumor gene HRPT2 maps to chromosome 1q21-q31.
- Author
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Szabó J, Heath B, Hill VM, Jackson CE, Zarbo RJ, Mallette LE, Chew SL, Besser GM, Thakker RV, and Huff V
- Subjects
- Child, Chromosome Deletion, Chromosome Mapping, Genetic Linkage, Heterozygote, Humans, Lod Score, Male, Pedigree, Syndrome, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 1, Hyperparathyroidism genetics, Jaw Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
The syndrome of hereditary hyperparathyroidism and jaw tumors (HPT-JT) is characterized by inheritance, in an autosomal dominant pattern, of recurrent parathyroid adenomas, fibro-osseous tumors of the mandible and/or maxilla, Wilms tumor, and parathyroid carcinoma. This syndrome is clinically and genetically distinct from other endocrine neoplasia syndromes and appears to result from mutation of an endocrine tumor gene designated "HRPT2." We studied five HPT-JT families (59 persons, 20 affected); using PCR-based markers, we instituted a genomewide linkage search after excluding several candidate genes. Lod scores were calculated at various recombination fractions (theta), penetrance 90%. We mapped HRPT2 to the long arm of chromosome 1 (1q21-q31). The maximal lod score was 6.10 at theta = .0 with marker D1S212, or > 10(6) odds in favor of linkage. In six hereditary Wilms tumor families (96 persons, 29 affected), we found no linkage to 1q markers closely linked with HRPT2 (lod scores -15.6 [D1S191] and -17.8 [D1S196], theta = .001). Nine parathyroid adenomas and one Wilms tumor from nine members of three HPT-JT families were examined for loss of heterozygosity at linked loci. The parathyroid adenomas and Wilms tumor showed no loss of heterozygosity for these DNA markers. Our data establish that HRPT2, an endocrine tumor gene on the long arm of chromosome 1, is responsible for the HPT-JT syndrome but not for the classical hereditary Wilms tumor syndrome.
- Published
- 1995
16. Management of hyperparathyroidism in the multiple endocrine neoplasia syndromes and other familial endocrinopathies.
- Author
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Mallette LE
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- Endocrine System Diseases complications, Endocrine System Diseases diagnosis, Humans, Hyperparathyroidism diagnosis, Hyperparathyroidism etiology, Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia complications, Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia diagnosis, Syndrome, Endocrine System Diseases therapy, Hyperparathyroidism therapy, Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia therapy
- Abstract
Generalized parathyroid hyperplasia with superimposed clonal tumor growth is the most frequent expression of the MEN 1 trait and must be corrected surgically. The Zollinger-Ellison syndrome is an indication for early and aggressive control of hypercalcemia. If gastrin secretion is normal, early parathyroid surgery is usually not required; and to delay the operation will facilitate location of all parathyroid glands, a requisite for successful surgery. The best surgical approach is an extensive primary dissection including thymectomy, followed by total parathyroidectomy with autogenous parathyroid grafting. Parathyroid disease in MEN 2 is less frequent and of later onset. It usually takes secondary consideration to the cure of the C-cell neoplasm. Several other less common hereditary syndromes with parathyroid involvement are reviewed.
- Published
- 1994
17. Pseudohypoparathyroidism.
- Author
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Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Calcifediol therapeutic use, Calcitriol therapeutic use, Calcium metabolism, Calcium therapeutic use, Dihydrotachysterol therapeutic use, Ergocalciferols therapeutic use, Genetic Counseling, Humans, Pseudohypoparathyroidism physiopathology, Pseudohypoparathyroidism metabolism, Pseudohypoparathyroidism therapy, Vitamin D therapeutic use
- Published
- 1994
18. Single-dose intravenous therapy with pamidronate for the treatment of hypercalcemia of malignancy: comparison of 30-, 60-, and 90-mg dosages.
- Author
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Nussbaum SR, Younger J, Vandepol CJ, Gagel RF, Zubler MA, Chapman R, Henderson IC, and Mallette LE
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- Aged, Diphosphonates adverse effects, Diphosphonates therapeutic use, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Double-Blind Method, Female, Humans, Hypercalcemia blood, Hypercalcemia etiology, Injections, Intravenous, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms blood, Pamidronate, Treatment Outcome, Diphosphonates administration & dosage, Hypercalcemia drug therapy, Neoplasms complications
- Abstract
Purpose: To determine the efficacy, dose-response relationship, and safety of 30, 60, and 90 mg of a single intravenous dose of an aminobisphosphonate, pamidronate (APD), for the treatment of moderate to severe hypercalcemia of malignancy., Patients and Methods: Patients with histologically proven cancer and a corrected serum calcium level of at least 12.0 mg/dL after 48 hours of normal saline hydration were enrolled in a double-blind, multicenter, randomized clinical trial. Pamidronate in 30-, 60-, or 90-mg doses was administered as a single 24-hour infusion. Serum calcium corrected for albumin, urine hydroxyproline, and calcium excretion, and serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) (1-84) were determined before and after pamidronate therapy., Results: Thirty-two men and 18 women entered the study. A dose-response relationship for normalization of corrected serum calcium was seen after pamidronate administration. Corrected serum calcium normalized in 40% of patients who received 30 mg, in 61% of patients who received 60 mg, and in 100% of patients who received 90 mg of pamidronate. The decline in the serum calcium level was associated with decreased osteoclastic skeletal resorption evidenced by a decrease in urine calcium and hydroxyproline excretion. Among those with a normalized corrected serum calcium level, the mean (median) duration of normalization of the corrected serum calcium value was 9.2 (4), 13.3 (5), and 10.8 (6) days in the 30-, 60-, and 90-mg treatment groups, respectively. The response of hypercalcemia to pamidronate was not significantly influenced by the presence of skeletal metastases. PTH 1-84, suppressed in patients on entry into this study, increased to a greater extent in those patients with osteolytic skeletal metastases compared with those with humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy. Clinical improvement, including improved mental status and decreased anorexia, accompanied the decline in the corrected serum calcium level in all three treatment groups. Side effects included low-grade fever, asymptomatic hypocalcemia, hypomagnesemia, and hypophosphatemia., Conclusions: A single-dose infusion of 60 to 90 mg of pamidronate was highly effective and well tolerated and normalized corrected serum calcium in nearly all patients (61% to 100%) with hypercalcemia of malignancy.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
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19. DNA quantitation in the study of parathyroid lesions. A review.
- Author
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Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Adenoma genetics, Humans, Hyperplasia genetics, Parathyroid Glands chemistry, DNA, Neoplasm analysis, Parathyroid Neoplasms genetics
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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20. Dominant familial syndromes with endocrine hyperfunction: an additional syndrome?
- Author
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Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Acromegaly genetics, Adult, Female, Genes, Dominant, Humans, Hyperplasia, Middle Aged, Paraganglioma genetics, Parathyroid Glands pathology, Pituitary Neoplasms genetics, Syndrome, Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia genetics
- Abstract
At least 8 separate dominant syndromes have been described which have hyperfunctioning endocrine tumors as an important component. Scattered reports in the literature suggest that there may be an additional syndrome, in which extra-adrenal paragangliomas (often multiple), pituitary adenomas, and parathyroid hyperplasia coexist. Of 3 such cases described to date, 2 have included information about the family history, which in each case suggested dominant inheritance. This would presumably be a less common syndrome than the others recognized previously, so that full evaluation of endocrine findings and family history in future cases will be important for developing our understanding of the syndrome.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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21. Case report: hypoparathyroidism with menses-associated hypocalcemia.
- Author
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Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Adult, Calcitriol blood, Child, Creatinine blood, Electrolytes blood, Female, Goiter surgery, Humans, Hypoparathyroidism blood, Hypoparathyroidism etiology, Middle Aged, Tetany physiopathology, Calcium blood, Hypocalcemia physiopathology, Hypoparathyroidism physiopathology, Menstruation physiology, Tetany etiology
- Abstract
For 18 years, a patient with idiopathic hypoparathyroidism has experienced stiffness or tetany chiefly at the time of menses. A significant decline (0.2 mmol/L) in her serum total and ionized calcium values was observed after the withdrawal of oral contraceptive and after spontaneous onset of menses. No increase in urinary calcium excretion or decline in serum magnesium or calcitriol occurred to explain the fall in serum calcium. In two hypoparathyroid women without the history of menses-associated tetany, serum calcium remained stable after withdrawal of oral contraceptive or conjugated estrogen. Serum calcitriol levels unexpectedly increased in these controls, possibly helping sustain serum calcium. The author concludes the following: (1) some hypoparathyroid women show a significant and symptomatic decline in serum calcium at the time of menses; (2) serum calcium values obtained at the time of menses may not be a reliable guide to adjusting medication dosage for hypoparathyroidism; and (3) further investigation will be needed to determine the mechanism of the decline in serum calcium values and whether the effect of estrogens on serum calcitriol might be altered in the absence of the parathyroid glands.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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22. T-lymphocyte activation in adult-onset idiopathic hypoparathyroidism.
- Author
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Wortsman J, McConnachie P, Baker JR Jr, and Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Antigens, Surface immunology, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Female, Flow Cytometry, Graves Disease immunology, Humans, Immunophenotyping, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, Leukocyte Count, Male, Middle Aged, Parathyroid Glands immunology, T-Lymphocyte Subsets pathology, T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic immunology, T-Lymphocytes, Helper-Inducer immunology, Thyroid Gland immunology, Hypoparathyroidism immunology, Lymphocyte Activation, T-Lymphocyte Subsets immunology
- Abstract
Purpose: Patients with adult-onset idiopathic hypoparathyroidism (AOIH) often have antibodies against the parathyroid glands and other tissues, suggestive of immune activation. The purpose of this study was to determine whether T-cell activation is also a component of the endocrine disease., Patients and Methods: We identified eight patients with idiopathic hypoparathyroidism diagnosed after the age of 30 years at two tertiary care centers and evaluated peripheral blood lymphocyte subset phenotype frequencies using monoclonal antibodies and flow cytometry. Control subjects were 13 patients with Graves' disease (five thyrotoxic and eight euthyroid) and 110 healthy volunteers. In two of the patients with AOIH, we also determined the mitogenic response to parathyroid cell membranes in peripheral lymphocytes., Results: Patients with AOIH had higher than normal frequencies of the following phenotypes (p less than 0.05 versus controls, one-way analysis of variance): CD4, helper T cells; CD29/CD4, inducer of helper T cells; CD16 and CD56, natural killer cells; and CD3/DR, activated T cells coexpressing DR. Patients with Graves' disease had significantly higher than control frequencies of CD25 (T cells bearing the interleukin-2 receptor), CD3/DR, and CD26 (also a marker of T-cell activation); whereas the frequency of CD29/CD4 was significantly less than the control frequency. Neither of the two AOIH patients tested showed lymphocyte proliferation in response to parathyroid or thyroid cell membrane fractions., Conclusions: Generalized T-cell activation represents a novel feature associated with AOIH. Although we could not demonstrate parathyroid-specific lymphocyte clonal expansion, these data are suggestive of a generalized immune disturbance possibly related to autoimmunity, in which one of the manifestations is hypoparathyroidism.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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23. The modulation of circulating parathyroid hormone immunoheterogeneity in man by ionized calcium concentration.
- Author
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D'Amour P, Palardy J, Bahsali G, Mallette LE, DeLéan A, and Lepage R
- Subjects
- Adult, Creatinine blood, Female, Humans, Menopause, Middle Aged, Parathyroid Glands drug effects, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Peptide Fragments blood, Phosphates blood, Reference Values, Sex Characteristics, Calcium blood, Calcium Chloride pharmacology, Parathyroid Glands metabolism, Parathyroid Hormone metabolism
- Abstract
Twenty normal individuals received 2-h iv infusions of CaCl2 and Na2 ethylenediamine tetra-acetate, with sampling every 15 min. PTH was measured by means of an intact hormone assay (I) and two carboxylterminal assays structured to react mostly with mid (M) or late (L) carboxylterminal fragments. A mathematical model was used to fit the sigmoidal relationship between ionized calcium (CA++) and PTH values. The influence of Ca++ on circulating PTH immunoheterogeneity was assessed via changes in L/I, M/I, and M/L ratios. Results are reported as means +/- SD. Response to hypocalcemia was highest with M (57.8 +/- 26.4 pmol/L, P less than 0.005 vs. L or I) and higher with L (20.1 +/- 5.6 pmol/L; P less than 0.0005 vs. I) than with I (14.1 +/- 6.4 pmol/L). L/I, M/I, and M/L decreased from 2.43 +/- 0.56 to 1.54 +/- 0.19 (P less than 0.0005), 8.44 +/- 2.38 to 4.36 +/- 4.07 (P less than 0.0005), and 3.49 +/- 0.71 to 2.86 +/- 0.76 (P less than 0.005), respectively, during Na2 ethylenediamine tetra-acetate infusion. Nonsuppressible PTH was again higher with M (13.7 +/- 4.8 pmol/L; P less than 0.0005 vs. L or I) and higher with L (2.8 +/- 0.7 pmol/L, P less than 0.0005 vs. I) than with I (0.5 +/- 0.3 pmol/L). L/I, M/I, and M/L ratios increased from 2.47 +/- 0.97 to 5.35 +/- 2.09 (P less than 0.0005), 8.90 +/- 3.10 to 29.56 +/- 14.89 (P less than 0.0005), and 3.62 +/- 0.90 to 5.30 +/- 1.91 (P less than 0.005) during CaCl2 infusion. The set-point for PTH stimulation by calcium was similar for M (1.15 +/- 0.035 mmol/L) and L (1.175 +/- 0.041 mmol/L) but significantly higher with the I assay (1.184 +/- 0.31 mmol/L; P less than 0.0005 vs. M). The M/I, L/I, and M/L ratio set-points were similar at 1.28 +/- 0.01, 1.27 +/- 0.01, and 1.29 +/- 0.02 mmol/L. Thus, even if proportionately more intact PTH and less carboxylterminal fragments are produced and secreted during hypocalcemia, the latter still predominate in the circulation. Furthermore, at high calcium values, secretion of fragments is less well inhibited than that of intact hormone. The lower secretion and higher ratio set-points suggest that the secretion and intracellular degradation of PTH have different sensitivities to inhibition by calcium.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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24. The hypercalcemias.
- Author
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Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Calcium blood, Diagnosis, Differential, Emergencies, Humans, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Hypercalcemia complications, Hypercalcemia etiology, Hypercalcemia physiopathology, Hypercalcemia therapy, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Reference Values, Hypercalcemia diagnosis
- Published
- 1992
25. Comparative study of pamidronate disodium and etidronate disodium in the treatment of cancer-related hypercalcemia.
- Author
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Gucalp R, Ritch P, Wiernik PH, Sarma PR, Keller A, Richman SP, Tauer K, Neidhart J, Mallette LE, and Siegel R
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Analysis of Variance, Calcium blood, Diphosphonates administration & dosage, Diphosphonates adverse effects, Double-Blind Method, Etidronic Acid administration & dosage, Etidronic Acid adverse effects, Female, Humans, Hypercalcemia etiology, Infusions, Intravenous, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms blood, Pamidronate, Diphosphonates therapeutic use, Etidronic Acid therapeutic use, Hypercalcemia drug therapy, Neoplasms complications
- Abstract
Purpose: This multicenter, double-blind, randomized trial was performed to determine the efficacy and safety of pamidronate disodium (APD) in comparison to etidronate disodium (EHDP) in the treatment of cancer-related hypercalcemia., Patients and Methods: Sixty-five male and female adult patients with cancer and corrected calcium levels of greater than or equal to 12.0 mg/dL after 24 hours of hydration were randomized to receive either 60 mg APD given as a single 24-hour infusion or 7.5 mg/kg EHDP given as a 2-hour infusion daily for 3 days., Results: APD normalized corrected calcium levels in 70% (21 of 30) of patients, whereas EHDP did so in 41% (14 of 34) of patients (P = .026). The mean corrected serum calcium level decreased from 14.6 to 10.5 mg/dL in the APD-treated group and from 13.8 to 11.6 mg/dL in the EHDP-treated group within the first week of treatment. There was no difference in response to APD in patients without versus those with bone metastases (78% v 67%). Both drugs were well tolerated., Conclusion: This study demonstrated that a single 60-mg infusion of APD is safe and more effective than EHDP given at the dose of 7.5 mg/kg for 3 days in the treatment of cancer-related hypercalcemia.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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26. Malignancy hypercalcemia: evaluation of parathyroid function and response to treatment.
- Author
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Mallette LE, Beck P, and Vandepol C
- Subjects
- Diphosphonates therapeutic use, Humans, Hypercalcemia drug therapy, Hypercalcemia etiology, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Parathyroid Hormone chemistry, Peptide Fragments blood, Hypercalcemia physiopathology, Neoplasms complications, Parathyroid Glands physiopathology
- Abstract
In 53 patients with malignancy-associated hypercalcemia, we measured serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) with an immunoradiometric assay (IRMA) for intact PTH and a midregion-specific radioimmunoassay (RIA). Values were measured at baseline to detect clinically unrecognized hyperparathyroidism and after treatment with intravenous bisphosphonate to test for a parathyroid response. One patient probably had primary hyperparathyroidism, since his serum PTH values were not appropriately suppressed at baseline and increased markedly during treatment before normocalcemia was achieved. In each of the 51 other evaluable cases, the intact PTH value was suppressed below 25 pg/ml (normal range 10-55 pg/ml), confirming a nonparathyroid hypercalcemia. Midregion PTH values were less fully suppressed but supported the diagnosis in 44 out of 49 cases. The five patients with high midregion PTH values each had renal insufficiency but in four, the intact PTH values were also the highest we observed in these patients. This suggests either a poorly suppressible intact PTH secretion or prolongation of intact PTH half-life by the renal insufficiency. Overall, midregion and intact PTH values were highly correlated (p less than 0.001). Restoration of normocalcemia increased PTH in both assays into or within the normal range, and when posttreatment hypocalcemia occurred, PTH values became elevated in both assays. We conclude the following: (1) both assays are useful for detecting parathyroid hyperfunction but the intact PTH assay is the better diagnostic tool when renal insufficiency is present, (2) hypercalcemia seems to suppress intact PTH secretion more fully than secretion of PTH fragments, and (3) parathyroid glands chronically suppressed by hypercalcemia can increase PTH secretion within 1 or 2 days after the hypercalcemia is corrected.
- Published
- 1991
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27. Ten weeks of intermittent hypocalcemic stimulation does not produce functional parathyroid hyperplasia.
- Author
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Mallette LE, Hollis BW, Dunn K, Stinson M, Dunn JK, Wittels E, and Gotto AM
- Subjects
- Aged, Arteriosclerosis drug therapy, Edetic Acid pharmacology, Edetic Acid therapeutic use, Humans, Hyperplasia, Hypocalcemia complications, Middle Aged, Parathyroid Glands pathology, Parathyroid Hormone metabolism, Time Factors, Calcium blood, Parathyroid Glands physiology
- Abstract
Hypocalcemia is a major stimulus for parathyroid hormone secretion and presumably the major cause of parathyroid hyperplasia in chronic hypocalcemic syndromes. We could find no data to indicate what degree, duration, or frequency of hypocalcemia is needed to produce parathyroid hyperplasia in humans. We have monitored the effects of thrice weekly hypocalcemic parathyroid stimulation for 10 weeks. Measurements were made during a study designed to test the feasibility of carrying out a randomized, blinded trial of "chelation therapy," a widely used but unproven method to treat atherosclerotic symptoms. Eight patients received infusions of disodium ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) and six received placebo infusions thrice weekly for ten weeks. The EDTA infusions (50 mg/kg over three hours) lowered serum ionized calcium at two hours by an average of 0.20 mmol/L and trebled the immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH) value. Basal serum iPTH, ionized calcium and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D values, measured just before the infusion, did not change significantly after 10 weeks of treatment with either EDTA or placebo. The increment in serum iPTH produced by the EDTA-induced hypocalcemia was also unchanged. Lowering ionized serum calcium to values below the normal range three times a week for 10 weeks is not a sufficient stimulus to cause a detectable increase in basal or stimulated parathyroid function.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The parathyroid polyhormones: new concepts in the spectrum of peptide hormone action.
- Author
-
Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Animals, Calcium metabolism, Female, Fetus metabolism, Humans, Parathyroid Hormone-Related Protein, Peptide Fragments physiology, Placenta metabolism, Pregnancy, Proteins physiology, Parathyroid Hormone physiology
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Hereditary hyperparathyroidism and multiple ossifying jaw fibromas: a clinically and genetically distinct syndrome.
- Author
-
Jackson CE, Norum RA, Boyd SB, Talpos GB, Wilson SD, Taggart RT, and Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Female, Fibroma pathology, Genetic Linkage, Humans, Jaw Neoplasms pathology, Male, Ossification, Heterotopic pathology, Pedigree, Syndrome, Fibroma genetics, Hyperparathyroidism genetics, Jaw Neoplasms genetics, Ossification, Heterotopic genetics
- Abstract
A large previously reported family with hyperparathyroidism has been reinvestigated recently because of the occurrence of multiple ossifying jaw fibromas in two affected members of the third generation similar to the jaw tumors of four of five affected members of the first generation. These maxillary and mandibular tumors can be differentiated from the "brown tumors" of hyperparathyroidism because they can appear and enlarge even though the hypercalcemia is surgically corrected. These tumors are histologically distinct fibroosseous lesions without the giant cells seen in "brown tumors." The parathyroid enlargement was mostly uniglandular, with multiple tumors found occasionally. Studies in DNA linkage were performed within this large family and a similar family in Houston to determine if the gene for this syndrome, termed HRPT2, is linked to DNA markers on chromosome 11, to which the gene for multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) type 1 has been linked. (This linkage is supported by our findings in one family with MEN 1 reported here.) Linkage studies were also performed with markers on chromosome 10, to which the genes for MEN 2A and MEN 2B have been linked. Evidence against close linkage with chromosome 10 and chromosome 11 markers suggests that this clinically distinct syndrome is also genetically distinct.
- Published
- 1990
30. Acute hypocalcemic effects of clinical contrast media injections.
- Author
-
Berger RE, Gomez LS, and Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Adult, Calcium blood, Chelating Agents adverse effects, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Male, Tomography, X-Ray Computed adverse effects, Angiography adverse effects, Contrast Media adverse effects, Hypocalcemia chemically induced, Parathyroid Hormone blood
- Abstract
A decrease in free ionic calcium levels has been reported in the coronary sinus after coronary artery injections of small doses (9 ml) of radiographic contrast media, but there were no studies of the systemic effects of larger doses of medium. Therefore, the acute effects of two commonly used radiographic contrast media on calcium metabolism were studied in nine patients undergoing angiography and five patients undergoing computed tomography. Free ionic calcium (Ca++) in serum was measured by ion-specific electrode, and immunoreactive parathyroid hormone by a highly sensitive radioimmunoassay. Infusion of Renografin or Reno-M-DIP acutely lowered serum Ca++ and produced an immediate increase in parathyroid hormone in each patient studied. Serum Ca++ fell to or below the lower limit of normal in about half the patients. The changes in Ca++ and parathyroid hormone were 2.5- to 4.5-fold greater than those observed after rapid infusion of equal or larger volumes of normal saline. In vitro, the contrast media had no direct effect on the parathyroid hormone assay, but reduced the Ca++ concentration of aqueous calcium solutions by about the amount predicted from their content of disodium edetate and sodium citrate. Contrast agents that contain divalent cation chelators should be used with care in patients in whom a fall in free ionic calcium might have detrimental effects.
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Osteoporosis. Approaching treatment with optimism.
- Author
-
Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Aging, Bone Resorption, Calcium Gluconate therapeutic use, Cushing Syndrome etiology, Estrogens therapeutic use, Female, Glucocorticoids adverse effects, Gonadal Steroid Hormones deficiency, Humans, Hyperthyroidism complications, Immobilization, Life Style, Male, Menopause, Middle Aged, Neoplasms complications, Risk, Osteoporosis drug therapy, Osteoporosis etiology
- Abstract
Osteoporosis, a pathologic condition of the skeleton marked by a decrease in total bone mass, may be produced by many different chronic insults. Early institution of preventive measures in all persons with risk factors is the most desirable goal, but recent evidence shows that several treatment regimens are effective, even in patients with well-advanced disease.
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Concomitant Graves' disease and primary hyperparathyroidism. Influence of hyperthyroidism on serum calcium and parathyroid hormone.
- Author
-
Arem R, Lim-Abrahan MA, and Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Aged, Calcium blood, Graves Disease blood, Humans, Hyperparathyroidism blood, Male, Middle Aged, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Graves Disease complications, Hyperparathyroidism complications
- Abstract
Two patients with coexistent Graves' disease and primary hyperparathyroidism were studied during medical treatment of their hyperthyroidism. Serum free calcium level was initially quite elevated (1.61 and 1.71 mM, normal 1.12 to 1.28 mM), but immunoreactive parathyroid hormone values were only slightly increased. The immunoreactive parathyroid hormone values of 153 and 173 nleq/ml (normal less than 150 nleq/ml) were far lower than expected in hyperparathyroid patients with a similar degree of hypercalcemia. As the patients became euthyroid during thionamide treatment, calcium values decreased to 1.39 and 1.61 mM, respectively, and parathyroid hormone increased to values clearly suggestive of hyperparathyroidism (454 and 229 nleq/ml, respectively). Parathyroidectomy and subtotal thyroidectomy cured both the hyperparathyroidism and the thyrotoxicosis in each case. These observations suggest that thyroid hormone had potentiated the osteoclastic effects of parathyroid hormone and that the resulting exacerbation of hypercalcemia had produced a relative suppression of hormone secretion by the abnormal parathyroid tissue.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Regulation of blood calcium in humans.
- Author
-
Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Bone and Bones metabolism, Feedback, Humans, Intestinal Mucosa metabolism, Kidney metabolism, Calcium blood
- Abstract
Serum calcium in humans is closely regulated, with a maximum excursion of values throughout the day of less than 6%. A number of hormonal controls serve to maintain the stability of the serum calcium value. The three most important hormones--PTH, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, and calcitonin--act chiefly on three organs--intestine, bone, and kidney. A set of simple diagrams that summarize these control mechanisms is presented. Organ diagrams are used to indicate the normal fluxes of calcium (or other ions) and the sites of hormone action, while a feedback loop diagram summarizes the interactions among the various factors. The feedback loop diagram predicts the direction of changes observed in each parameter in various disorders of calcium metabolism and may be useful for constructing experimental models or for teaching purposes.
- Published
- 1989
34. The localization of abnormal mediastinal parathyroid glands.
- Author
-
Doppman JL, Mallette LE, Marx SJ, Monchik JM, Broadus A, Spiegel AM, Beazley R, and Aurbach GD
- Subjects
- Adult, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Hyperparathyroidism diagnostic imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Neck blood supply, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Parathyroid Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Phlebography, Thyroid Gland blood supply, Adenoma diagnostic imaging, Choristoma diagnostic imaging, Mediastinal Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Parathyroid Glands diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
The venous drainage of parathyroid glands ectopically located in the mediastinum is generally caraniad into the inferior thyroid veins. Parathyroid glands in the neck can cause elevated concentrations of parathyroid hormone in mediastinal veins because of thyroidalthymic anastomoses. Therefore venous sampling alone cannot distinguish cervical from mediastinal adenomas. Arteriography can localize mediastinal parathyroids and should be perfomred before any repeat exploration.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Treatment of hyperparathyroidism by percutaneous embolization of a mediastinal adenoma.
- Author
-
Doppman JL, Marx SJ, Spiegel AM, Mallette LE, Wolfe DR, Aurbach GD, and Geelhoed G
- Subjects
- Adenoma diagnostic imaging, Adult, Angiography, Blood Coagulation, Female, Gelatin Sponge, Absorbable therapeutic use, Humans, Male, Mammary Arteries diagnostic imaging, Mediastinal Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Middle Aged, Parathyroid Glands blood supply, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Parathyroid Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Recurrence, Silicone Elastomers, Thyroid Gland blood supply, Thyroid Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Thyroid Neoplasms therapy, Adenoma therapy, Embolism, Hyperparathyroidism therapy, Mediastinal Neoplasms therapy, Parathyroid Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Percutaneous embolization of parathyroid adenomas was attempted in three hypercalcemic patients with previously unsuccessful neck explorations. Two adenomas were in the mediastinum and the third was within the thyroid lobe. Autologous clot, Gelfoam, and silicone rubber were used to obstruct feeding arteries. The intrathyroidal adenoma failed to respond but both mediastinal adenomas were infarcted. Hyperparathyroidism recurred after 7 months in one patient but the other remains normocalcemic 8 months postembolization.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. A controlled study of the effects of thyrotoxicosis and propranolol treatment on mineral metabolism and parathyroid hormone immunoreactivity.
- Author
-
Mallette LE, Rubenfeld S, and Silverman V
- Subjects
- Adult, Calcium metabolism, Double-Blind Method, Female, Graves Disease drug therapy, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Radioimmunoassay, Graves Disease metabolism, Minerals metabolism, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Propranolol therapeutic use
- Abstract
We studied mineral metabolism in 15 thyrotoxic patients and 15 controls matched for sex, age, and weight. Thyrotoxic subjects showed significantly higher serum calcium, phosphate, alkaline phosphatase, and globulin and lower serum creatinine, magnesium, and albumin. Parathyroid hormone immunoreactivity (iPTH) was measured with three different antisera. Thyrotoxic patients showed markedly reduced iPTH values in the most sensitive assay, a midregion-specific assay based on homologous antiserum BG-6. Antiserum 211/32 gave slightly reduced iPTH values, but antiserum NG-1 gave values that were increased by 65%. The limited sensitivity of these later two antisera, like that of others used earlier for such studies, may have blunted the apparent fall in iPTH (antiserum 211/32) or predisposed the assay to a systematic artifact (antiserum NG-1). These results show that for use in the evaluation of hypercalcemia in thyrotoxic patients, a PTH assay must first be characterized as to the expected result in uncomplicated thyrotoxicosis. Twelve of the thyrotoxic subjects entered a random order cross-over study in which propranolol and placebo were given in double-masked fashion for 6 consecutive days each. Overall, the drug did not alter calcium, phosphate, or magnesium metabolism. It lowered serum calcium only in two overtly hypercalcemic subjects, whose urinary calcium excretion did not decline. These results confirm that propranolol may reduce elevated serum calcium levels in thyrotoxicosis and suggest that in this setting the drug may have a direct or indirect effect on renal calcium metabolism.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Radioimmunoassay for the middle region of human parathyroid hormone using an homologous antiserum with a carboxy-terminal fragment of bovine parathyroid hormone as radioligand.
- Author
-
Mallette LE, Tuma SN, Berger RE, and Kirkland JL
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Cattle, Goats immunology, Humans, Hypercalcemia blood, Hypocalcemia blood, Hypoparathyroidism blood, Microchemistry methods, Radioimmunoassay methods, Renal Dialysis, Parathyroid Hormone blood
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The spectrum of metabolic bone disease in lymphoblastic leukemia.
- Author
-
Cohn SL, Morgan ER, and Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Alkaline Phosphatase analysis, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Hypercalcemia complications, Parathyroid Hormone analysis, Phosphorus analysis, Radioimmunoassay, Bone Diseases, Metabolic complications, Leukemia, Lymphoid complications
- Abstract
Eight patients with childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and hypercalcemia, osteopenia, or vertebral compression fractures seen at our institution during the last 12 years were evaluated for biochemical evidence of bone disease. Five patients were hypercalcemic, three had abnormal phosphorous levels, and four had elevated alkaline phosphatase values. Parathyroid hormone (PTH) was measured by a polyvalent radioimmunoassay in five patients and these levels were abnormally high in three patients. Four of these five patients also had PTH measured by a midregion-specific radioimmunoassay. One patient had a high PTH value. Two patients had low levels and one patient had a normal PTH level. Although these studies suggest diverse biochemical mechanisms may be contributing to the bone changes and hypercalcemia seen in childhood ALL, ectopic PTH production as well as ectopically produced fragments of PTH may have a role in mediating bone resorption and hypercalcemia.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Total body retention of orally administered 47-calcium in primary hyperparathyroidism.
- Author
-
Mallette LE, Sode JE, Marx SJ, Georges LP, and Aurbach GD
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Adult, Aged, Calcium urine, Calcium Radioisotopes, Diet, Female, Humans, Hyperparathyroidism etiology, Hyperparathyroidism surgery, Hyperplasia complications, Hypophosphatemia, Familial metabolism, Male, Middle Aged, Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia complications, Osteoporosis metabolism, Parathyroid Diseases, Parathyroid Neoplasms complications, Sarcoidosis metabolism, Time Factors, Calcium metabolism, Hyperparathyroidism metabolism
- Abstract
Using a whole body radiation detector, we have measured the total body retention of 47-Ca 7 days after oral administration of the isotope to patients with various disorders of calcium metabolism. The percent retention of 47-Ca given with 90 mg of unlabeled (carrier) calcium varied with the calcium metabolic status as follows: normals (n equals 14), 33-43 percent (mean 38); primary hyperparathyroidism (n equals 28), 32-74 percent (mean 52); idiopathic hypercalciuria (n equals 9), 34-49 percent (mean 42); and hypercalcemia of other etiology (n equals 3), 23-26 percent (mean 25). Almost half (13/28) of those with hyperparathyroidism showed a retention above 55 percent, distinguishing them from subjects with idiopathic hypercalciuria. Retention of 47-Ca correlated poorly with clinical measures of severity of hyperparathyroidism. When isotope was diluted with a smaller amount of carrier calcium (20 mg), retention was increaseed in normals (n equals 5) to 46-54 percent (mean 50) and in hyperparathyroidism (n equals 5) to 64-87 percent (mean 73). After surgical cure of hyperparathyroidism retention of isotope returned toward normal in 5 of 7 subjects. Whole body retention of orally administered 47-Ca may prove useful in detecting hyperparathyroidism in subjects with mild hypercalcemia or hypercalciuria.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Bovine parathyroid hormone-(41-84), a hormone fragment with desirable properties for use as radioligand.
- Author
-
Mallette LE and Bradley WA
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Chickens, Goats, Guinea Pigs, Humans, Hyperparathyroidism blood, Immune Sera, Iodine Radioisotopes, Peptide Fragments, Rabbits, Radioimmunoassay methods, Reference Values, Species Specificity, Parathyroid Hormone blood
- Abstract
Radioiodinated bPTH has been widely used as the labeled ligand in the radioimmunoassay of PTH. We now report the properties of a carboxyterminal fragment of bPTH that has several favorable characteristics when used as radioligand. This peptide, the chief component of a commercial preparation of bPTH, was isolated by gel filtration, where it migrated more slowly than did authentic bPTH-(1-84). It yielded lower nonspecific binding values and more sensitive hPTH assays than were seen with the intact hormone. By immunological criteria this peptide lacked the aminoterminal region of PTH, since hPTH-(1-34) did not inhibit its binding to any of 11 different antisera with known ability to recognize the aminoterminal region of PTH. The peptide did not contain most or all of the carboxyterminal region, however, since its binding to anti-PTH sera was inhibited by hPTH-(44-68) or hPTH-(53-84). Sequential Edman degradation of the iodinated peptide released iodotyrosine at the third cycle, suggesting the structure, bPTH-(41-84). The lower nonspecific binding and enhanced assay sensitivity provided by this peptide suggest that the use of other natural or synthetic fragments of PTH as radioligands might enhance the performance of PTH assays.
- Published
- 1981
41. Radioimmunoassays for the 28-48 region of parathyroid hormone detect intact hormone but not hormone fragments.
- Author
-
Mallette LE, Renfro M, Lemoncelli J, and Rosenblatt M
- Subjects
- Animals, Goats immunology, Humans, Immune Sera, Rabbits immunology, Radioimmunoassay methods, Parathyroid Hormone analysis, Peptide Fragments analysis
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The clotted CBC tube--a sign of severe hypercalcemia.
- Author
-
Small SD and Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Calcitriol pharmacology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Blood Cell Count, Blood Coagulation, Blood Specimen Collection instrumentation, Calcium blood, Hypercalcemia diagnosis
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Immunoreactive parathyroid hormone levels in platyrrhini and catarrhini: A comparative analysis with three different assays.
- Author
-
Adams JS, Gacad MA, Rude RK, Deseran M, Endres DB, and Mallette LE
- Abstract
Serum concentrations of the hormonal form of vitamin D
3 -1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D3 [1,25-(OH)2 -D3 ]-are elevated in many genera of platyrrhines when compared to catarrhines; this elevation is presumed to result from a decrease in the ability of the target cell receptor effectively to recognize 1,25-(OH)2 -D3 . The activity of the renal 25-hydroxyvitumin D3 -1α-hydroxylase, the mammalian enzyme which synthesizes the majority of the circulating 1,25-(OH)2 -D3 , is accelerated by parathyroid hormone (PTH). In order to determine whether the elevated serum concentrations of 1,25-(OH)2 -D3 in platyrrhines were the result of relative hyperparathyroidism, we measured serum levels of immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH) in normocalcemic platyrrhines, catarrhines, and human subjects with assays that recognize different domains of the human PTH molecule. Antisera directed against the biologically active, aminoterminus of PTH yielded comparable mean values for iPTH among three test groups. The mean concentration of iPTH as assessed by a "proximal" midregion assay was significantly reduced in platyrrhine serum when compared to either human or catarrhine serum. A "distal" midregion assay yielded a reduced mean value for iPTH in both platyrrhine and catarrhine serum when compared to human serum. These data suggest that 1) high circulating levels of 1,25-(OH)2 -D3 in New World primates are not the result of hyperparathyroidism; and 2) structural homology between human and primate PTH diminishes progressively as one moves toward the carboxyterminus of the molecule and is lost more rapidly in the platyrrhine than in the catarrhine hormone., (Copyright © 1987 Wiley‐Liss, Inc., A Wiley Company.)- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Cyclic therapy of osteoporosis with neutral phosphate and brief, high-dose pulses of etidronate.
- Author
-
Mallette LE, LeBlanc AD, Pool JL, and Mechanick JI
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Bone Resorption drug effects, Calcium blood, Drug Administration Schedule, Drug Therapy, Combination, Etidronic Acid administration & dosage, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Osteoporosis metabolism, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Phosphates administration & dosage, Spine drug effects, Spine metabolism, Etidronic Acid therapeutic use, Osteoporosis drug therapy, Phosphates therapeutic use
- Abstract
We have designed a cyclic regimen for the treatment of osteoporosis based on the activate, depress, free, and repeat (ADFR) concept. Osteoclastic bone resorption is activated by 7 days of oral neutral phosphate and inhibited with a brief pulse (5 days) of etidronate disodium at a high dose (20 mg/kg body weight). Patients next take calcium supplements for 48 days before resuming phosphate to enter the next cycle. Osteoporotic women increased the bone mineral density of the lumbar spine at 6 months by 7.2 +/- 5.2% (mean +/- SD, N = 14) and at 12 months by 8.2 +/- 4.0% (N = 8). Control observations in regularly exercising postmenopausal women (N = 30) showed no significant change in spine mineral density after 20 months (0.5 +/- 3.2%), confirming the stability of the measurement technique. The two patients who responded poorly to the cyclic regimen each showed a blunted rise in serum PTH during oral phosphate administration, suggesting that the rise in PTH induced by oral phosphate may be an important component of this cyclic regimen. This preliminary study does not identify which component or components of the regimen are responsible for the increase in bone mass but provides positive encouragement for randomized studies designed to determine the optimum dosage, duration, and timing of each component of the regimen.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Mild hyperparathyroidism.
- Author
-
Mallette LE
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Risk, Hyperparathyroidism surgery
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Pregnancy as state of physiologic absorptive hypercalciuria.
- Author
-
Gertner JM, Coustan DR, Kliger AS, Mallette LE, Ravin N, and Broadus AE
- Subjects
- Adult, Calcium, Dietary administration & dosage, Female, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Humans, Intestinal Absorption, Time Factors, Calcitriol blood, Calcium metabolism, Pregnancy
- Abstract
An increase in circulating, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D level and net intestinal calcium absorption have been previously demonstrated in pregnant women and have been widely regarded as compensatory mechanisms whereby fetal mineral demands are satisfied. The alternate possibility, that these adjustments might anticipate such demands, has not previously been considered. To examine the effects of pregnancy on the intestinal absorption and renal excretion of calcium, oral calcium tolerance tests were performed and urinary calcium excretion was measured in 16 healthy women receiving a moderate calcium intake during and after pregnancy. Circulating 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D levels and indexes of parathyroid function were also measured. As expected, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D levels were significantly (p less than 0.05) elevated throughout pregnancy (94 +/- 11, 118 +/- 9, and 117 +/- 11 pg/ml in the first, second, and third trimesters, respectively, versus 51 +/- 5 pg/ml after delivery). Twenty-four-hour calcium excretion also increased sharply (247 +/- 54, 316 +/- 42, 300 +/- 61 mg versus 91 +/- 18 mg), often to the point of hypercalciuria. Calcium tolerance test results included significant increases in the calciuric and calcemic responses during each trimester, whereas fasting calcium excretion and parathyroid function remained normal. These findings portray normal pregnancy as a state of physiologic absorptive hypercalciuria and call into question the widespread practice of supplementing calcium intake in otherwise well-nourished women during pregnancy.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Sensitivity of the parathyroid hormone-1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D axis to variations in calcium intake in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.
- Author
-
Insogna KL, Mitnick ME, Stewart AF, Burtis WJ, Mallette LE, and Broadus AE
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Calcium urine, Calcium, Dietary pharmacology, Cyclic AMP blood, Female, Humans, Hyperparathyroidism blood, Hyperparathyroidism physiopathology, Male, Middle Aged, Parathyroid Glands metabolism, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Calcitriol blood, Calcium, Dietary administration & dosage, Hyperparathyroidism metabolism, Parathyroid Hormone metabolism
- Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated a spectrum of parathyroid responsivity to alterations in the extracellular calcium concentration in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, but studies employing physiologic amounts of calcium have not, to our knowledge, been reported. We studied 18 unselected patients with primary hyperparathyroidism at the lower (400 mg) and upper (1000 mg) limits of a normal dietary intake of calcium. The diet containing high-normal amounts of calcium induced only a slight increase in 24-hour calcium excretion (from 281 to 337 mg per day) yet was associated with significant reductions in fasting serum levels of immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (from 60 to 50 nleq per milliliter; P less than 0.001), nephrogenous cyclic AMP (from 3.52 to 2.63 nmol per deciliter of glomerular filtrate; P less than 0.001), and plasma levels of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (from 74 to 58 pg per milliliter; P less than 0.001). A wide spectrum of responses was observed, with some patients appearing to have essentially autonomous parathyroid function and others having marked suppressibility (up to 50 per cent) of the parathyroid hormone-vitamin D axis. We conclude that parathyroid function may be suppressed by dietary calcium in some patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Parathyroid angiography: a review of current knowledge and guidelines for clinical application.
- Author
-
Mallette LE, Gomez L, and Fisher RG
- Subjects
- Adult, Angiography adverse effects, Arteries, Calcium blood, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Parathyroid Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Quadriplegia etiology, Selenomethionine, Thyroid Gland blood supply, Veins, Parathyroid Glands blood supply
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Evaluation of hypocalcemia with a highly sensitive, homologous radioimmunoassay for the midregion of parathyroid hormone.
- Author
-
Mallette LE, Wilson DP, and Kirkland JL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Hyperparathyroidism, Secondary diagnosis, Hypoparathyroidism diagnosis, Immune Sera, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Radioimmunoassay, Reference Values, Hypocalcemia diagnosis, Parathyroid Hormone blood
- Abstract
The diagnosis of hypoparathyroidism by radioimmunoassay of serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) has been hampered by lack of an assay system sensitive enough to allow discrimination between low and normal values. A new assay for human PTH that has improved sensitivity has been developed. It uses an homologous antiserum (against the human hormone) and uses a carboxy-terminal fragment of bovine PTH as tracer to provide an assay monospecific for the midregion of PTH. Immunoreactive PTH (iPTH) was detectable in 25/27 normal children and borderline detectable in the other two. The pediatric normal range was slightly lower than that previously established in adults. Among patients with secondary hyperparathyroidism and normal renal function, iPTH was 3- to 8-fold elevated in those with rickets, and 1.3- to 2.0-fold above normal in those with more acute forms of hypocalcemia. Twelve patients with hypoparathyroidism were studied. iPTH was undetectable in seven with permanent total hypoparathyroidism, and was borderline detectable in five, including four neonates who proved to have transient hypoparathyroidism. In these four patients, iPTH became detectable as the requirements for supplemental calcium decreased. Measurement of iPTH with an adequately sensitive assay may be useful in the diagnosis and management of pediatric hypocalcemia.
- Published
- 1983
50. Autogenous parathyroid grafts for generalized primary parathyroid hyperplasia: contrasting outcome in sporadic hyperplasia versus multiple endocrine neoplasia type I.
- Author
-
Mallette LE, Blevins T, Jordan PH, and Noon GP
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Calcium blood, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Hyperparathyroidism blood, Hypoparathyroidism blood, Male, Middle Aged, Parathyroid Glands metabolism, Parathyroid Glands pathology, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Reoperation, Hyperparathyroidism surgery, Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia surgery, Parathyroid Glands transplantation
- Abstract
Sixteen patients with generalized primary parathyroid hyperplasia were treated with attempted total parathyroidectomy and placement of an autogenous parathyroid graft in the forearm musculature; these patients have been followed for up to 79 months. We assessed completeness of parathyroidectomy on the basis of the background immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH) value 3 to 7 days after surgery, which predicted the chance of a graft-independent recurrence or persistence of hyperparathyroidism (0/8 if undetectable versus 4/5 if normal or high). Total parathyroidectomy was sometimes difficult to achieve because of the presence of supernumerary or ectopic parathyroid glands; to enhance the success rate of total parathyroidectomy, we suggest both the use of preoperative ultrasonography to locate intrathyroidal parathyroids and a routine search for supernumerary parathyroids that includes transcervical thymectomy. Graft function was monitored by measuring the secretory gradient for iPTH (the difference between the two antecubital fossae). Gradients on postoperative days 3 to 7 were barely detectable, but by 3 weeks, larger iPTH gradients were noted in every case. By 4 months, the graft could maintain normal serum calcium levels in all but one case. Autonomous graft function has evolved in four of six evaluable patients with type I multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN I), but in none of the nine patients with sporadic hyperplasia (p = 0.043). A prospective study is needed to determine whether the use of a smaller number of parathyroid fragments for the autogenous graft in known MEN I patients might delay recurrence.
- Published
- 1987
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