For 2 weeks 27 patients with hypercalcemia received a standard oral treatment with (3-amino-1-hydroxypropylidene)-1,1-bisphosphonate (APD) as the sole agent. Results were grouped according to causes of hypercalcemia and compared with effects of APD in 13 normocalcemic patients with Paget's disease of bone and 7 with osteoporosis. In 12 hypercalcemic patients with osteolytic bone lesions and in the 20 normocalcemic patients, the mean serum calcium decreased to final levels that were subnormal and significantly lower than those obtained after treatment of 8 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. In 3 patients with myeloma and in 4 tumor patients without bone lesions, serum calcium did not always decrease to the normal range. Implications of these observations for the mechanism of hypercalcemia are discussed.
In 10 patients with Paget's disease of bone and 2 patients with osteoporosis, we studied the effects of hypocalcemia and hypophosphatemia induced by disodium-(3-amino-1-hydroxypropylidene)-1,-bisphosphonate (APD) treatment on the serum concentration of PTH and 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D [1,25(OH)2D3] and on calcium absorption and balance. The fall in serum calcium and phosphate was associated with a rise in the serum concentration of PTH and 1,25(OH)2D3, coupled with increases in net calcium absorption and calcium balance. The concentration of 1,25(OH)2D3 was significantly related (P less than 0.001) to the serum calcium (r = 0.66), the serum phosphate (r = 0.78), and the serum PTH (r = 0.71), confirming the interrelated control of these parameters on 1,25(OH)2D3 production. Moreover the rise in 1,25(OH)2D3 caused an appropriate rise in calcium absorption (r = 0.74) and calcium balance (r = 0.86), showing that this vitamin D metabolite contributes as a hormone to calcium homeostasis.
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