Acta Biomedica Scientifica (Nov 2019)

Disputable Issues of Etiology and Pathogenesis of Tertiary Hyperparathyroidism

  • G. A. Bersenev,
  • E. A. Ilyicheva,
  • D. A. Bulgatov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.29413/ABS.2019-4.5.17
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 5
pp. 104 – 115

Abstract

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Hyperparathyroidism is a clinical and laboratory syndrome characterized by high production of the chief cells of the parathyroid hormone, a calcium-phosphorus metabolism disorder and the organ failure (kidneys, bone tissue).There are primary, secondary and tertiary hyperparathyroidism.This literature review is focused on tertiary hyperparathyroidism and includes the following sections: definition of different forms of hyperparathyroidism, the role of vitamin D in the tertiary hyperparathyroidism development, the development of tertiary hyperparathyroidism in chronic kidney disease patients, the development of tertiary hyperparathyroidism in patients after kidney transplantation, differential diagnosis various forms of hyperparathyroidism, indications for surgical tertiary hyperparathyroidism treatment in patients with kidney disease, in patients with normal kidney function.Objective. The objective of this literature review is to study the current information about this definition, pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment of tertiary hyperparathyroidism.Methodology. The literature review was taken in English data bases MEDLINE (Pubmed), Scopus, Cochlear library, using following keywords: “secondary hyperparathyroidism pathogenesis diagnosis treatment”, “tertiary hyperparathyroidism pathogenesis diagnosis treatment”, “development of tertiary hyperparathyroidism from secondary hyperparathyroidism”, “chronic vitamin D deficiency, hyperparathyroidism”, “early stages of chronic renal failure, hyperparathyroidism”. Also, search for the same keywords was completed in Russian data base Elibrary.Discussion. Both the lack of a common understanding of this problem, and the presence of diverse and contradictory data of the etiology and pathogenesis indicate the need for further study of tertiary hyperparathyroidism.

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