Abstract

Serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels are markedly lower in patients with the adynamic lesion (AD) of renal osteodystrophy than in those with secondary hyperparathyroidism (2 degrees HPT), but serum PTH values are often moderately elevated in AD when compared to subjects with normal renal and parathyroid gland function (NL). To study the inhibitory effect of calcium on PTH release in AD and in 2 degrees HPT, the response to two-hour intravenous calcium infusions was examined in 6 patients with AD, in 31 patients with 2 degrees HPT and in 20 NL. Basal serum PTH levels were 88 +/- 51, 536 +/- 395, and 26 +/- 6 pg/ml, respectively, in AD, 2 degrees HPT and NL, whereas basal ionized calcium levels did not differ. When expressed as a percentage of pre-infusion values, PTH levels at the end of two-hour calcium infusions were higher both in AD (23.2 +/- 5.6%) and in 2 degrees HPT (27.8 +/- 12.3%) than in NL, (11.9 +/- 5.8%, P < 0.001). Both the amplitude of suppression (%) and the rate of decline (min-1) in serum PTH were less in AD and 2 degrees HPT than in NL, P < 0.05 for each parameter; corresponding values for each group, with 95% confidence intervals, were 77% (73 to 82) and 0.039 min-1 (0.030 to 0.048) in AD, 72% (68 to 76) and 0.031 min-1 (0.025 to 0.036) in 2 degrees HPT and 87% (84 to 89) and 0.070 min-1 (0.058 to 0.089) in NL. Neither variable differed between AD and 2 degrees HPT. Basal and nadir serum PTH levels were highly correlated: r = 0.95 and P < 0.05 in AD; r = 0.90 and P < 0.01 in 2 degrees HPT; r = 0.75 and P < 0.01 in NL. The slope of this relationship was less, however, both in AD and in 2 degrees HPT than in NL, P < 0.05 by analysis of co-variance. Thus, serum PTH levels fell below 20% of pre-infusion values in fewer subjects with AD (1 of 6) or 2 degrees HPT (9 of 31) than in NL (17 of 20) (chi 2 = 17.81, P < 0.005). The results indicate that the inhibitory effect of calcium on PTH release in vivo does not differ in AD and 2 degrees HPT despite marked differences in basal serum PTH levels. Variations in functional parathyroid gland mass rather than disturbances in calcium-sensing by the parathyroids probably account not only for the lower basal serum PTH levels in patients with AD compared to those with 2 degrees HPT, but also for the moderately elevated serum PTH values commonly seen in patients with AD.

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