Abstract

To evaluate the efficacy of subtotal parathyroidectomy (STP) in the treatment of primary hyperparathyroidism due to multiple gland disease, 12 patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) type I syndrome were reviewed out of 132 patients undergoing parathyroidectomy. Each patient had yearly follow-up examinations and calcium determinations for a minimum of four years except for one patient who died one year after S.T.P. Permanent hypoparathyroidism occurred in three patients. Two patients remained persistently hypercalcemic, and two patients developed recurrent hypercalcemia. One patient required oral administration of calcium and vitamin D for ten years following STP before recurrent hypercalcemia developed. Another patient was normocalcemic for three years before recurrent hypercalcemia was noted. Only five of these 12 patients remain normocalcemic without need of calcium and vitamin D therapy. In patients with MEN type I, the long-term results of STP are less than satisfactory. Not only is it difficult to gauge how viable parathyroid tissue must be left to prevent both permanent hypoparathyroidism and persistent hyperparathyroidism but there is also a long-term risk of recurrence.

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