parathyroid disease

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| name = Parathyroid disease

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| image = Parathyroid adenoma low mag.jpg

| caption = Micrograph of a parathyroid adenoma (left) and normal parathyroid gland (right). H&E stain.

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Many conditions are associated with disorders of the function of the parathyroid gland. Some disorders may be purely anatomical resulting in an enlarged gland which will raise concern. Such benign disorders, such as parathyroid cyst, are not discussed here. Parathyroid diseases can be divided into those causing hyperparathyroidism, and those causing hypoparathyroidism.{{cite web |url=http://www.utmb.edu/otoref/grnds/Parathyroid-2002-03/Parathyroid-2002-03.htm |title=Parathyroid Disease: Diagnosis and Treatment |website= |accessdate=2009-03-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090406084936/http://www.utmb.edu/otoref/grnds/Parathyroid-2002-03/Parathyroid-2002-03.htm |archive-date=2009-04-06 |url-status=dead }}

Comparison

class="wikitable"
Condition

! Calcium

! Parathyroid hormone

primary hyperparathyroidism

| high

| high

primary hypoparathyroidism

| low

| low

secondary hyperparathyroidism

| normal

| high

pseudohypoparathyroidism

| low

| high

= Procedure =

Parathyroidectomy, or the removal of the parathyroids, requires general anesthesia. The patient is intubated and placed in a supine position with the chin at fifteen degrees by elevating the shoulders to permit the extension of the neck. Then a transverse cut is made above the sternal notch. The transversal thyroid lobe is reached and is rotated up to discover and ligate the thyroid vein to separate the thyroid artery. Exploration must be done meticulously to search for adenomas. If an adenoma is identified, exploration must be continued because it is common that more than one neoplasia appears. Before the procedure, the glands are marked to make them more visible during the procedure. If one of them cannot be found, the procedure is to remove a complete thyroid lobe on the side where the gland is not found to avoid an intrathyroid parathyroid gland. After exploration, if there is one, two or even three parathyroid glands affected, they are removed and the other one left in situ. If all four glands are affected then three and a half are removed. The remaining half is marked with a suture and the surgeon must be sure that the blood supply will not be compromised. A total parathyroidectomy or auto transplantation to the forearm of the remaining half gland, may also be recommended.{{cite journal |last1=Higgins |first1=RM |last2=Richardson |first2=AJ |year=1991 |title=Total parathyroidectomy alone or with autograft for renal hyperparathyroidism? |journal=QJM |volume=79 |issue=1 |pages=323–32 |pmid=1852858 | doi = 10.1093/oxfordjournals.qjmed.a068553 |doi-access=free }}

= Parathyroid auto transplantation =

Parathyroid auto transplantation is part of the treatment when a patient has hyperparathyroidism and three or four parathyroid glands were already removed, but during the surgery one of the glands (in the case of the removal of three) is relocated at another part of the body to make, the procedure less risky another procedure. In the case of complete parathyroidectomy, a half gland is cryopreserved. In case the patient suffers hypoparathyroidism. If this happens the extracted parathyroid is relocated to another place of the body for example the forearm. Parathyroid auto transplantation begins with parathyroid tissue extraction, which must be preserved into a cold isotonic solution until the patient needs it. Research has shown that parathyroid tissue can function at subcutaneous level until the transplantation. If this is not possible, the most common procedure is to create a small pocket of muscle, tissue at least 2 cm deep by separating the muscular fibers. Then the parathyroid tissue is placed into and closed by suturing the area. After the extraction the tissue might be processed at the laboratory, as soon as possible. Once at the laboratory the tissue sample is placed at a frozen petri dish where it is cut into small pieces (approximately 1–2 mm). The small pieces are placed into test tubes and filled with a solution in three parts one at 20% of autologous serum (about 0.6 ml) and the other part of isotonic solution at 20% (about 0.6 ml) then a solution of 2 ml of polypropylene and mixed gently. Then is placed into a container at -70 °C for a night then finally the container passes through the phase of liquid or vapor nitrogen immersion and is kept there until needed. When it is needed the sample is taken out of the nitrogen and placed into a bath of water at 37 °C until the ice is melted almost completely except for the samples core. Then 0.5 ml of the melted solution is removed and replaced for fresh isotonic solution.{{cite journal |last1=Olson |first1=JA |last2=Debenedetti |first2=MK |year=1996 |title=Parathyroid autotransplantation during thyroidectomy. Results of long-term follow-up.|journal=Ann Surg |volume=223 |issue=5 |pages=472–480 |pmc=1235165 |pmid=8651738 |doi=10.1097/00000658-199605000-00003}}

Related conditions

References

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{{Medical resources

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| ICD10 = {{ICD10|E|20||e|20}}-{{ICD10|E|21||e|20}}

| ICD9 = {{ICD9|252}}

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| MeshID = D010279

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{{Parathyroid disease}}

{{Authority control}}

Category:Parathyroid disorders