The aim of the present study was to determine whether patients with the incident hospital diagnosis of primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) in Denmark during the period 1977-1993 had an increased mortality from cardiovascular disease and cancer compared to the rest of the Danish population. In a random sample of half of the Danish population, all patients with an incident hospital diagnosis of PHPT were identified in the National Hospital Patients Register. The mortality in the cohort was analyzed and compared with the background population. A cohort of 1578 patients was identified. Follow-up of 1179 women and 376 men, who did not die in the same month as the incident PHPT diagnosis, was made through 1993. Of these, 312 (20%) died within the follow-up period. The standard mortality ratio (SMR) for women was 1.7 (95% confidence interval [95% CI]: 1.5-1.9). SMR for men was 1.6 (95% CI: 1.3-2.0). In women an increased mortality from ischemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, and cancer was found. In men an increased mortality from cerebrovascular disease and cancer was found.
Our data suggest that hypertension or other factors, rather than plasma calcium or PTH, could explain the increased levels of the inflammatory markers and NT-proBNP in PHPT. We therefore suggest that aggressive treatment of hypertension should be initiated in patients with PHPT to try to reduce the increased cardiovascular mortality described in PHPT. Further prospective studies are needed to validate the suggestion that increased levels of NT-proBNP and inflammatory markers also represent strong prognostic markers of cardiovascular disease in patients with PHPT.
The results suggest that the reduced PBV contributes to the reduced effective blood volume in cirrhosis. The relation between PBV and PTT and the low diffusing capacity suggests the pulmonary vascular compartment as an important element in the pathophysiology of the lung dysfunction in cirrhosis.
Serum ionised calcium in the upper quintile in women and men together did not seem to be a risk factor in development of IHD and CVD, but a non-significant tendency towards increased risk of IHD was observed in men with ionised calcium in the upper quintile compared to men in the lower four quintiles.
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