The risk of severe complications arising from primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) is increased during pregnancy. Gestational pHPT often goes undiagnosed, and by the time it is diagnosed, a majority of women have endured one or more failed pregnancies. During pregnancy, active transport of calcium ions from the mother to the fetus leads to suppression of the fetal parathyroids. When the prenatal pool of calcium is depleted, the newborn may develop neonatal hypocalcemic tetany. The mother, in turn, may suffer from worsening hypercalcemia and a hypercalcemic crisis after delivery. Awareness and confirmation of the diagnosis may be crucial for the outcome. The only definitive treatment of pHPT is parathyroidectomy, which should be recommended in most cases. Our two cases illustrate both the importance of and the difficulty in detecting pHPT during pregnancy, as well as some of the serious complications that may occur during pregnancy and after delivery.
State of the art lightscanning of the breast was tested against mammography in 2568 women in a Swedish multicenter study. The study was in two parts. One was in women with symptoms from the breasts (the clinical study) comprising 3178 examined breasts with 198 cancers; the other in asymptomatic women (the screening study) comprising 1909 examined breasts with 126 cancers. In women with symptoms from the breasts, lightscanning did not contribute to clinical examination and mammography. In the screening situation, it was poor to pick up small cancers. Mammography alone falsely diagnosed cancer in 6.9% of the patients whereas lightscan falsely diagnosed cancer in 19.1%. Lightscan was not better than mammography in young women. The study shows that lightscanning in its current form is inferior to standard mammography.
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