Abstract

Ten male chronic schizophrenic patients with polydipsia and 10 nonpolydipsic controls, matched for gender, diagnosis, duration of illness, age, and race, were studied by dual-and single-photon absorptiometry to estimate bone density of the lumbar spine and radius and by 24-hr urine collections to estimate urinary electrolyte excretion. Bone density was normal in the control group, but was abnormally low in the polydipsic group, which had a markedly increased incidence of fractures. Electrolyte excretion was normal in the control group and in the polydipsic group when water intake was restricted to normal amounts; increased urinary sodium and calcium excretion occurred in proportion to polydipsia. As polydipsia is associated with a number of physiological changes, the cause of the osteopenia is unclear; we suggest that a negative calcium balance caused by increased urinary calcium excretion induced by extracellular space expansion may play an important role in the causation of the skeletal changes.

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