Abstract

Forearm bone mineral content was measured in 28 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism before and 1 year after successful parathyroidectomy. The forearm bone mineral content rose from a mean value of 1.068 to 1.092 g/cm (P less than 0.05, paired t-test). Those patients with the lower initial values had the largest rise. In an additional study, the forearm bone mineral content was measured in 10 women over the age of 40 years (mean age 58.6 +/- 7.9SD years) with hyperparathyroidism before and for 2 years after successful parathyroidectomy and compared with the forearm bone mineral content measured over 2 years in 12 women (mean age 56.3 +/- 5.5SD years) with continuing hyperparathyroidism and with the forearm bone mineral content of 12 eucalcemic control women (mean age 58.8 +/- 8.2SD years), also measured over 2 years. The parathyroidectomized group gained bone, whereas the ongoing hyperparathyroid group and the eucalcemic control group lost bone. The difference between the parathyroidectomized group and the ongoing hyperparathyroid group was significant after 2 years (P less than 0.05). The percentage loss of forearm bone mineral in the eucalcemic control subjects was not significantly different from the percentage loss of forearm bone mineral in the ongoing hyperparathyroid group, although the initial mean bone mineral content in the eucalcemic group was significantly higher than in the ongoing hyperparathyroid group, suggesting that a possible determinant of bone mineral loss in women in this age group is the initial bone mineral content.

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