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  Vol. 83 No. 1, July 1961 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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  Papers Read at the Sixty-Eighth Annual Meeting of the Western Surgical Association, Detroit, December 1, 2, and 3, 1960
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Acute Parathormone Poisoning Complicating Parathyroid Adenoma

ARTHUR R. NELSON, M.D.; JAMES R. CANTRELL, M.D.

AMA Arch Surg. 1961;83(1):1-10.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

Introduction

The clinical features of parathyroid adenomata have been repeatedly described in the literature, as have the renal and osseous complications of these tumors.1-7 A less common but equally serious complication, which has not been generally appreciated, is the development of acute parathormone poisoning. This designation should perhaps be placed in quotation marks, since proof does not yet exist that the clinical syndrome is, in fact, caused by an acute excess of parathormone. Experimental and clinical evidence, however, suggest that this is the case, and on this basis we will tentatively use the term.

Perhaps the most significant fact about this complication is that recognition of the situation as a surgical emergency is apparently generally lacking. A uniformly fatal result appears inevitable unless urgent surgical intervention is undertaken. Three such patients have been treated by the authors, all of whom were subjected to emergency operation, and all of whom . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

PHOENIX; SEATTLE


Footnotes

This paper was read at the 68th Annual Meeting of the Western Surgical Association, Detroit, Dec. 2, 1960.



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