A. Caillotaugusseau et al., BONE-FORMATION AND RESORPTION BIOLOGICAL MARKERS IN COSMONAUTS DURINGAND AFTER A 180-DAY SPACE-FLIGHT (EUROMIR-95), Clinical chemistry, 44(3), 1998, pp. 578-585
Long-term spaceflights induce bone loss as a result of profound modifi
cations of bone remodeling, the modalities of which remain unknown in
humans. We measured intact parathyroid hormone (PTH) and serum calcium
; for bone formation, serum concentrations of bone alkaline phosphatas
e (BAP), intact osteocalcin (iBGP), and type 1 procollagen propeptide
(PICP); for resorption, urinary concentrations (normalized by creatini
ne) of procollagen C-telopeptide (CTX), free and bound deoxypyridinoli
ne (F and B D-Pyr), and Pyr in a 36-year-old cosmonaut (RTO), before (
days -180, -60, and -15), during (from days 10 to 178, n = 12), and af
ter (days +7, +15, +25, and +90) a 180-day spaceflight, in another cos
monaut (ASW) before and after the flight. Flight PTH tended to decreas
e by 48% and postflight PTH increased by 98%. During the flight, BAP,
iBGP, and PICP decreased by 27%, 38%, and 28% respectively in CM1, and
increased by 54%, 35%, and 78% after the flight. F D-Pyr and CTX incr
eased by 54% and 78% during the flight and decreased by 29% and 40% af
ter the flight, respectively. We showed for the first time in humans t
hat microgravity induced an uncoupling of bone remodeling between form
ation and resorption that could account for bone loss.