The American journal of medicine
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The hospital course of 218 consecutive patients with primary hyperparathyroidism admitted over a three-year period for parathyroidectomy at the Massachusetts General Hospital was reviewed to determine the incidence and identify the risk factors for the development of the hungry bone syndrome. Twenty-five patients with the hungry bone syndrome were identified (12.6 percent). Compared to patients with uncomplicated metabolic responses to parathyroid surgery, these patients were older by a mean of 10 years; they had higher preoperative serum levels of calcium, alkaline phosphatase, N-terminal parathyroid hormone, and blood urea nitrogen; and their resected parathyroid adenomata were larger. ⋯ Stepwise multivariate analysis of preoperative variables enabled the development of a discriminant function for prediction of postoperative hypocalcemia and hypophosphatemia. Identified predictive variables were volume of resected parathyroid adenoma, blood urea nitrogen, alkaline phosphatase, and age. When validated on an independent patient population, these readily obtainable preoperative clinical and laboratory parameters will allow identification of a subgroup of patients who are at greater risk for the development of the hungry bone syndrome following parathyroid surgery.
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Review Case Reports
Acute paraplegia: a presenting manifestation of aortic dissection.
Two patients who presented with acute paralysis of the lower extremities as an initial manifestation of aortic dissection are described. The first patient had transient chest pain followed by flaccid paralysis of her lower extremities and severe back pain. In the second patient, sudden paralysis of both legs developed without pain of any sort. ⋯ Both patients had a proximal (type I or A) aortic dissection. The first patient's entrance tear in the aortic intima was just above the aortic valve with antegrade propagation, whereas in the second patient, the entrance tear was at the aortic isthmus, with both antegrade and retrograde dissection. Acute cardiac tamponade resulted in sudden deterioration and death in both patients, before any therapeutic intervention could be entertained.
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When gastrointestinal (Gl) bleeding occurs in patients receiving anticoagulation, an underlying pathologic lesion is usually suspected and a thorough diagnostic evaluation is undertaken. Over a 15-year period, 50 patients were identified as having Gl bleeding while receiving warfarin. Approximately half of all bleeding episodes occurred from the upper Gl tract, with a lesion identified 81 percent of the time, usually peptic ulcer disease. ⋯ No diagnosis was established in 47 percent of all bleeding episodes despite appropriate evaluation; in these patients, a mean follow-up of 39.6 months disclosed no premalignant or malignant lesions. Mortality associated with bleeding was less than 2 percent. These data suggest that a diagnosis is usually established in patients receiving anticoagulation who experience upper Gl bleeding, whereas the cause of lower Gl bleeding may remain occult even after a thorough evaluation; however, the absence of a definitive diagnosis carries a good prognosis.