Early postoperative function of suppressed parathyroid glands with microscopic hyperplasia.

1986 
: Calcium-parathyroid hormone (Ca-PTH) relationships were studied perioperatively in 35 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. Twenty-nine patients had solitary adenomas that caused preoperative hypercalcemia; those patients whose remaining glands were subjected to biopsy were classified as having either microscopic evidence of suppression in those glands (15 patients) or no evidence of suppression (less than or equal to 30% stromal fat on biopsy cross sections, 11 patients). Before surgery, all patients showed the expected positive slopes for Ca-PTH linear regression curves. After surgery, all patients with adenomas showed an immediate and sustained shift of the Ca-PTH regression to the right; this shift achieved statistical significance only in those patients whose remaining glands showed microscopic evidence of suppression (greater than 30% fat, p less than 0.05). Moreover, the slope of the Ca-PTH regression curve for these patients assumed a negative value 1 month after surgery. All patients with adenomas were eucalcemic after surgery, regardless of the cellularity of the remaining in situ glands. We conclude that the absence of microscopic suppression in grossly suppressed parathyroid glands at the time of adenoma resection for hyperparathyroidism does not affect postoperative results. However, the presence of microscopic hyperplasia in macroscopically normal or suppressed glands may represent a persistent alteration in biologic function, evidenced by failure of these glands to achieve negative calcium regulation.
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