Soin A S, Gupta S, Kochupillai N, Sharma L K
Department of Surgical Disciplines and Endocrinology, All India Institute of Medical Science, New Delhi.
Indian J Cancer. 1994 Jun;31(2):72-7.
Twenty eight patients of sporadic primary hyperparathyroidism seen over a period of 10 years were studied. There were 18 females and 10 males with a mean age of 35.9 years. Bone involvement was the commonest clinical presentation (90%) followed by renal involvement (65%) and more than half the patients (54%) had involvement of both the skeletal and renal systems. The tumor was clinically palapable in six patients. Thalliumtechnetium subtraction scan had a sensitivity of 87% followed by computerised tomography (70%), and ultrasound (65%) in diagnosing parathyroid pathology. All the patients underwent surgical excision of the abnormal gland (S). Adenomas constituted the single largest group (90%). Histologically, only 32% of the patients had chief cell morphology. Clear cell (32%) mixed cell, and oxyphil cell (7.2%) types accounted for the remaining adenomas. Majority of the patients (82%) had symptomatic postoperative hypocalcemia requiring intravenous calcium with or without vitamin D supplementation. In contrast to western reports most of our patients were young, presented late with florid bone and renal disease and had large palpable tumors.