Abstract

We compared the effects of exogenous pentagastrin and meal-stimulated gastrin on plasma immunoreactive calcitonin (iCT) in various studies of 13 normal adult men. Bolus intravenous injection of pentagastrin (0.5 microgram/kg) produced increases of iCT in 8 of 9 men. There was a linearly increasing response of iCT concentrations to increasing doses of pentagastrin (0.0625, 0.125, 0.25, and 0.5 microgram/kg) and to achieved serum immunoreactive pentagastrin concentrations (r = 0.72, P less than 0.01). To determine the effects of endogenous gastrin upon peripheral iCT concentrations, we measured serum immunoreactive gastrin (iG) and plasma iCT in four men at frequent intervals for 240 min after ingestion of low- (100 mg) and high- (400 mg) calcium meals. Serum iG increased in all subjects, with a peak at approximately 30 min. However, plasma iCT levels were unchanged from basal throughout the study. The increase of pentagastrin (0.3 pmol/ml) which caused a barely detectable increase of iCT was five- to tenfold greater than the mean maximal increases of gastrin after low- and high-calcium meals (0.04 and 0.06 pmol/ml, respectively). These results suggest that increases of plasma iCT concentrations after administration of pentagastrin in man reflect pharmacologic phenomena and that postprandial gastrin secretion may be insufficient to affect peripheral iCT concentrations.

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