The biological diagnosis of the primary hyperparathyroidism is now facilitated by the reliability of the balance of phosphate and calcium and the dosage of parathyroid hormone (PTH). This diagnosis of preoperative localization is important as surgery are now targeted to the responsible lesion. The "gold standard" for this localization is the cervical ultrasound exploring the usual sites of adenomas and a MIBI scintigraphy (the parathyroid adenoma significantly concentrating this cell marker). However, the diagnosis of preoperative localization remains a subject of discussion as to the most appropriate tests. Indeed, the morphological diagnosis is performed at the ultrasound stage in more than half the cases. It is the new performance of this morphological examination that makes it possible to obtain these results.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
100
cervical ultrasound will be realized by a endocinologist trained in the cervical ultrasound
Damien JOLLY
Reims, France
RECRUITINGAdenoma parathyroid diagnosed using cervical ultrasound
Adenoma parathyroid diagnosed using cervical ultrasound. Cervical ultrasound will be realized by a endocrinologist trained in the cervical ultrasound and not informed of the results of the echoscintigraphy
Time frame: Day 0
Adenoma parathyroid diagnosed using echoscintigraphy
Adenoma parathyroid diagnosed using echoscintigraphy. Echoscintigraphy will be realized by a nuclear physician not informed of the results of the cervical ultrasound
Time frame: Day 0
Adenoma parathyroid diagnosed using anatomopathology
Adenoma parathyroid diagnosed by anatomopathologist, after surgery.
Time frame: Day 0
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