Background: Subjective symptoms such as decreased energy, chronic fatigue, and depression are associated with hyperparathyroidism. Studies have shown that these symptoms are improved during short-term follow-up after parathyroidectomy. This study evaluates the durability of this subjective improvement in quality-of-life symptoms in a large population of patients with follow-up greater than 1 year after operation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Intraoperative parathyroid hormone (ioPTH) levels are not monitored routinely in thyroid surgery, although they are used widely during parathyroidectomy as an indicator of parathyroid gland function. This prospective study evaluated the occurrence of hypoparathyroidism after thyroid surgery and the use of ioPTH levels to predict the need for postoperative vitamin D supplementation.
Methods: Seventy-two patients underwent thyroidectomy or neck dissection by 1 surgeon.
Intraoperative parathyroid hormone (ioPTH) monitoring is useful in the operative management of hyperparathyroidism. Measurement of intraoperative total serum calcium (TSC) and ionized calcium (ICa) levels may be less expensive and more readily available methods of intraoperative guidance during neck dissection than ioPTH levels, the gold standard. We compared the accuracy of monitoring intraoperative TSC and ICa to that of ioPTH for predicting surgical cure during parathyroidectomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Hyperparathyroidism is associated with subjective feelings of fatigue and depression as well as limitations in physical activity from musculoskeletal complaints. These quality of life symptoms are not widely accepted as an indication for parathyroidectomy. This study quantifies and compares subjective symptoms of patients with hyperparathyroidism before and after surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study tests whether exposure to cigarette smoke alone or combined with cellophane wrapping of the pancreas increases the development of microscopic abnormalities in the pancreas of Syrian golden hamsters. Ninety hamsters were randomly divided into 4 groups. Thirty-five hamsters were exposed to 3 continuous hours of cigarette smoke daily for 3 months following celiotomy to cellophane wrap the gastric lobe of the pancreas (group 1).
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