Abstract
A 2-compartmental analysis of 47Ca kinetics was carried out in 21 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) and 7 healthy control subjects. The results were compared with serum concentrations of calcium, inorganic phosphorus, alkaline phosphatase, and immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH). The well known increase in exchangeable calcium was found to be not uniform in its subcompartments and with a marked predominance of the osseous fraction. The most important result was the increase of calcium efflux from osseous into extraosseous exchangeable calcium in agreement with the results of Talmage et al. 28 studying PTH actions on calcium flux rates between blood and bone in rats. The increased calcium efflux in pHPT was the only kinetic parameter correlated with serum iPTH. Neither increased calcium accretion indicating high bone turnover, nor serum calcium concentrations and exchangeable calcium fractions correlated with serum iPTH. These results lead to the following conclusions: radiocalcium kinetics provides valuable parameters of bone calcium turnover (osseous exchangeable calcium, bone-calcium efflux, and calcium accretion). Calcium efflux from exchangeable bone calcium, determined kinetically, might be related to PTH induced calcium transport from bone fluid compartment to extracellular fluids according to the concept of Talmage 1977. 18
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