The adult greyhound was found to be similar to adult man with respect to kinetic and histomorphometric indices of calcium metabolism. The relationship between trabecular bone tissue balance and the pattern of human PTH fragment 1-34 (hPTH 1-34) administration by daily injections or continuous sc infusions was investigated in this model and the results compared to those from a clinical trial of hPTH 1-34 in involutional osteoporosis (peptide administration by single daily injections). In the dogs, the daily injection regime elevated plasma levels of immunoreactive hPTH 1-34 for no more than 4 h/day. The greyhounds so treated showed significantly increased indices of bone formation (surface osteoid, plasma alkaline phosphatase activity, and skeletal accretion rate of calcium) and resorption (number of osteoclasts, resorption surfaces). Iliac trabecular bone volume increased significantly, as it did in the patients. The infusions did not significantly increase the trabecular bone volume or the 47Ca accretion rate, two parameters which increased in parallel in dogs and patients treated successfully by daily injections. The osteoclastic surfaces, however, were clearly increased by continuous infusions, while the increases in the osteoblastic surfaces were less statistically significant. Since hPTH 1-34 may inhibit osteogenesis in Friedenstein chambers, it is possible that the increased osteoblastic activity induced by the daily injection regime in trabecular bone is dependent on the noncontinuous nature of the PTH stimulus.
Long-term studies of gastrointestinal radio-calcium absorption were undertaken in adult greyhounds before and during two treatment regimes with human parathyroid hormone fragment 1-34 (hPTH 1-34). The results were correlated with plasma vitamin D metabolite levels and kinetic indices related to the balance of fluxes of calcium between plasma and the rapidly exchangeable calcium pools of bone. Compared with adult man, results obtained before treatment started showed lower indices of gastrointestinal calcium absorption and considerably higher concentrations of 24-hydroxycalcidiol in the dogs. Daily injections of hPTH 1-34 at 1.7 microgram day-1 kg-1 significantly increased indices of radiocalcium absorption and plasma calcitriol concentrations, while only causing transient calcaemic responses. The individual magnitudes of the calcaemic response correlated positively with indices of radiocalcium retention in the exchangeable pools of bone which in turn correlated positively with 'late-phase' absorption of radiocalcium from the gut. Subcutaneous infusions of hPTH 1-34 at 0.5 microgram day-1 kg-1 to the same dogs were just insufficient to cause hypercalcaemia, but increased plasma calcitriol concentrations. Indices of radiocalcium absorption were not increased. Continuous parathyroid hormone (PTH) infusion is now known to substantially down-regulate renal PTH receptor density, whereas recovery after a brief exposure to PTH occurs within 24 h. It is possible that the differences in response of the gut to the two regimes may in part be related to their differing effects on some PTH receptors.
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