EVIDENCE FOR DISTURBED REGULATION OF CALCIOTROPIC HORMONE METABOLISM IN GITELMAN SYNDROME

Citation
Mg. Bianchetti et al., EVIDENCE FOR DISTURBED REGULATION OF CALCIOTROPIC HORMONE METABOLISM IN GITELMAN SYNDROME, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism, 80(1), 1995, pp. 224-228
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Endocrynology & Metabolism
ISSN journal
0021972X
Volume
80
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
224 - 228
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-972X(1995)80:1<224:EFDROC>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
Little attention has been paid to interactions between circulating lev els of calcium, PTH, and 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol [1,25(OH)(2)D] and bone mineral density in primary renal magnesium deficiency. Plasma and urinary electrolytes, and circulating levels of calciotropic horm ones were studied in 13 untreated patients with primary renal tubular hypokalemic alkalosis with hypocalciuria and magnesium deficiency. The blood ionized calcium concentration was significantly lower in patien ts than in controls. Despite this fact, PTH and 1,25-(OH)(2)D levels w ere similar in both groups of subjects. The negative linear relationsh ips between PTH and ionized calcium, which significantly differed betw een Gitelman patients and healthy subjects in terms of intercept; the negative relationship between ionized calcium and 1,25-(OH)(2)D, which was comparable in both groups; and the positive relationship between 1,25-(OH)(2)D and PTH, which was identical in both groups, point both to a blunted secretion of PTH induced by magnesium depletion and to th e lack of interference of the latter with the activation of 1 alpha-hy droxylase by PTH. The similar bone mineral density at the lumbar spine by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry in 11 patients and 11 healthy sub jects argues against chronically sustained negative calcium balance.