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The latest anatomical discovery: the parathyroid glands or Glandulae parathyreoideae of Owen-Sandström-Gley.

Abstract
In 1852, Owen, a prominent British anatomist, described the parathyroid glands. While dissecting a rhinoceros, he noted a small compact yellow body, attached to the thyroid. Virchow and later Remak described the human parathyroids around 1960, but credit for the first complete description goes to the Sandström in 1980. More than a decade later Gley, showed that it was the removal of the parathyroids that accounted for the tetany that followed thyroidectomy. The association of parathyroid pathology and skeletal abnormalities was made in 1914 by Erdheim and Schlagenhaufer, and Mandl, was the first surgeon to successfully treat a case of osteitis fibrosa by surgical removal of a parathyroid adenoma in 1925. The most extensive work on hyperparathyroidism was done in the 1930s by Albright form Boston, who described parathyroid hyperplasia, and differentiated between primary, secondary and tertiary hyperparathyroidism. Progresses in anatomy, physiology and surgery of the parathyroid glands, have contributed to various effective modalities of diagnosis and treatment.
AuthorsCarlos Ortiz-Hidalgo
JournalCirugia y cirujanos (Cir Cir) Vol. 90 Issue 1 Pg. 140-149 ( 2022) ISSN: 2444-054X [Electronic] Mexico
Vernacular TitleEl último descubrimiento anatómico: las glándulas paratiroides o Glandulae parathyreoideae de Owen-Sandström-Gley.
PMID35120101 (Publication Type: Case Reports, Journal Article)
CopyrightCopyright: © 2022 Permanyer.
Topics
  • Humans
  • Hyperparathyroidism, Primary
  • Hyperplasia (pathology)
  • Male
  • Parathyroid Glands (pathology, surgery)
  • Parathyroid Neoplasms (surgery)
  • Parathyroidectomy

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