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  Vol. 131 No. 7, July 1996 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Recurrent Secondary Hyperparathyroidism

An Argument for Total Parathyroidectomy

Kristin A. Skinner, MD; Lionel Zuckerbraun, MD

Arch Surg. 1996;131(7):724-727.


Abstract

Objective
To define better the incidence and causes of recurrent secondary hyperparathyroidism.

Design
Review of total parathyroidectomy with autotransplantation in uremic patients and literature review.

Setting
Two teaching hospitals.

Patients
Nine patients treated for secondary hyperparathyroidism between 1982 and 1993 by a single surgeon.

Interventions
Total parathyroidectomy with auto-transplantation into the sternocleidomastoid muscle. Recurrence was treated, if necessary, with a graft reduction procedure.

Main Outcome Measures
The symptomatic and biochemical response to initial therapy, morbidity, and mortality, as well as the development of recurrent hypercalcemia.

Results
All patients were normocalcemic after their initial surgery. One patient died postoperatively (mortality, 11%). Three (38%) of the remaining patients developed recurrent hypercalcemia, 2 (25%) requiring reoperation. Of the 2 patients who underwent surgery for recurrence, 1 had an adenoma in the implant and the other had graft hyperplasia.

Conclusions
Recurrence rates after total parathyroidectomy with autotransplantation are substantial and, given the pathophysiology of secondary hyperparathyroidism, unavoidable in patients with uncorrected renal failure. An argument is made for performing total parathyroidectomy alone in patients with secondary hyperparathyroidism who will not undergo renal transplantation in the near future.

Arch Surg. 1996;131:724-727



Author Affiliations

From the Departments of Surgery, University of Southern California School of Medicine (Dr Skinner) and University of California—Los Angeles School of Medicine (Dr Zuckerbraun), Los Angeles.



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