Low Bone Mineral Density after Total Gastrectomy in Males: a Preliminary Report Emphasizing the Possible Significance of Urinary Net Acid Excretion, Serum Gastrin and Phosphorus
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Angelika Schmiedl
Abstract
The bone mineral density (BMD) and the associated extracellular status of mineral and acid-base metabolism were evaluated in 11 males, 3–18 years after total gastrectomy (GX). In the lumbar spine, but not in the femoral neck, BMD was decreased in seven, normal in three, and falsely high in one individual. Relative to the limits of normalcy, fasting serum levels of gastrin were low, but normal for calcium, phosphorus, parathyroid hormone, calcitonin and vitamin D, while the level of total alkaline phosphatase was elevated; fasting urine pH and calcium were low, while phosphorus and net acid were high. Regression analyses revealed serum gastrin and phosphorus, and urinary net acid as possible predictors of BMD. It was concluded that over the long-term GX evokes low BMD, but not hyperparathyroidism and deranged vitamin D metabolites. Future studies may focus on gastrin, parathyroid hormone-independent hyperphosphaturia and disturbed acid-base metabolism as indicators of a new extra-cellular equilibrium of minerals.
Copyright © 1999 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Development of Molecular Genetics
- The Changing Face of Clinical Laboratories
- Analysis of the Gly40Ser Polymorphism in the Glucagon Receptor Gene in a German Non-Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus Population
- A Relationship between K-ras Gene Mutations and Some Clinical and Histologic Variables in Patients with Primary Colorectal Carcinoma
- Particle Counting Immunoassay for Urinary Cotinine. Comparison with Chromatography, Enzyme-linked Immunoassay and Fluorescence Polarization Immunoassay
- Identification of IgG-specific Oligoclonal Banding in Serum and Cerebrospinal Fluid by Isoelectric Focusing: Description of a Simplified Method for the Diagnosis of Neurological Disorders
- Low Bone Mineral Density after Total Gastrectomy in Males: a Preliminary Report Emphasizing the Possible Significance of Urinary Net Acid Excretion, Serum Gastrin and Phosphorus
- Six Methods for the Determination of C-Peptide Evaluated
- Automation of Urine Sediment Examination: a Comparison of the Sysmex UF-100 Automated Flow Cytometer with Routine Manual Diagnosis (Microscopy, Test Strips, and Bacterial Culture)
- Characterization of the Isoenzyme Profile of β-N-Acetylhexosaminidase in the Urine of Newborns
- Clinical Laboratory Diagnostics. Thomas Lothar, editor
- Structure-based Ligand Design. Klaus Gubernator and Hans-J. Böhm, editors (Methods and Principles in Medicinal Chemistry, vol. 6.)