Calcitriol deficiency with retained synthetic reserve in chronic renal failure
Autor: | Richard L. Prince, Jacqueline C. Kent, R.W. Retallack, Brian G. Hutchison, G. Neil Kent |
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Rok vydání: | 1988 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Calcitriol Low serum calcitriol chemistry.chemical_element Calcium Phosphates Internal medicine Cyclic AMP polycyclic compounds medicine Renal mass Humans Hyperparathyroidism business.industry Significant difference Middle Aged Vitamin D Deficiency medicine.disease Calcium Dietary Endocrinology Plasma phosphate chemistry Parathyroid Hormone Nephrology Kidney Failure Chronic Chronic renal failure Female lipids (amino acids peptides and proteins) business medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Kidney International. 33:722-728 |
ISSN: | 0085-2538 |
DOI: | 10.1038/ki.1988.58 |
Popis: | Calcitriol deficiency with retained synthetic reserve in chronic renal failure. Serum calcitriol and the free calcitriol index together with factors considered to regulate calcitriol production were measured in eleven patients with moderate chronic renal failure (MCRF) and eleven age- and sex-matched normal subjects. Although the serum dialysable calcium levels were similar in the two groups, there was depression of calcitriol levels and an elevation of PTH and nephrogenous cyclic AMP (NcAMP) levels in the MCRF patients. Furthermore, plasma phosphate levels were higher and the renal phosphate threshold was depressed in this patient group. When all subjects were grouped together calcitriol was positively correlated with GFR. When calcitriol levels were factored for GFR, to permit an assessment of calcitriol production per unit functioning renal mass, there was no significant difference between normal and MCRF subjects. To determine whether reserve for calcitriol production existed, six of the MCRF patients and six of the age- and sex-matched normal subjects received a low calcium diet for one week supplemented by cellulose phosphate to bind calcium within the gut. In both groups there was a significant rise in calcitriol, although the absolute levels were much lower in the MCRF patients than the normal subjects. These results suggest that calcitriol deficiency is a major feature of MCRF despite marked hyperparathyroidism. The rise in calcitriol levels in MCRF suggests persistent reserve secretory capacity in this condition. Therefore, the low serum calcitriol concentration may be due not only to structural renal damage, but also to suppression of calcitriol formation perhaps due to altered renal phosphate handling. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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