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Ectopic calcification. The role of parathyroid hormone.
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1985
Year
Arterial CalcificationParathyroid DiseaseSurgeryParathyroid GlandOsteoporosisSurgical PathologyParathyroid HormoneChronic Kidney DiseaseMineral MetabolismHealth SciencesHistopathologySoft Tissue CalcificationEndocrinologyBone MetabolismUrologyPhysiologyMedicineNephrologyBone Histology
In 42 uraemic patients radiological skeletal survey, biochemistry and bone histology were compared before and at 6-12 months (42 patients), 12-24 months (26 patients) or 24-48 months (12 patients) after parathyroidectomy. The presence of small vessel or non-visceral soft tissue calcification was not related to the age, sex, duration of end-stage renal failure treatment, total serum calcium, magnesium, phosphate, Ca x P product, alkaline phosphatase, ionised calcium, serum aluminium, iPTH, severity of radiological and histological osteitis fibrosa or parathyroid gland weight. Twenty-three patients (55%) had small vessel and 20 (48%) soft tissue calcification before parathyroidectomy. Despite a marked improvement in subperiosteal erosions (37 healed, 5 improved) and healing of osteitis fibrosa histologically, seven patients developed new and six developed increased peripheral arterial calcification while in 10 patients non-visceral soft tissue calcification disappeared and in two decreased. Successful parathyroidectomy improves non-visceral calcification but not arterial calcification despite reduction in Ca x P product and iPTH.