To evaluate the efficacy and safety of alendronate, a double-masked, active (alfacalcidol) controlled comparative study for 48 weeks was carried out in a total of 210 Japanese patients with osteoporosis. The doses of alendronate and alfacalcidol were 5 mg/day and 1 microgram/day, respectively. The lumbar bone mineral density (LBMD) values observed at 12, 24, 36 and 48 weeks after the initiation of alendronate treatment were 3.53 +/- 0.53%, 5.37 +/- 0.62%, 5.87 +/- 0.74% and 6.21 +/- 0.59% (mean +/- SE), respectively, higher than the baseline value. Corresponding values in the alfacalcidol group were 1.50 +/- 0.43%, 0.69 +/- 0.63%, 1.12 +/- 0.60% and 1.36 +/- 0. 63%, respectively. There was a significant difference between the two groups at each time point (p<0.05 or p<0.001). The bone turnover markers were depressed during treatment in the alendronate group: -32.2% for alkaline phosphatase, -53.7% for N-terminal osteocalcin and -45.0% for urinary deoxypyridinoline compared with the corresponding baseline values. On the contrary, no notable changes in these parameters were observed in the alfacalcidol group. Treatment with alendronate caused a transient decrease in serum calcium concentrations associated with an increase in the serum level of intact parathyroid hormone. In contrast, treatment with alfacalcidol resulted in a tendency of these parameters to change in the opposite direction. No difference in fracture incidence between the two groups was observed. The overall safety of alendronate was comparable to that of alfacalcidol. In conclusion, although it was a relatively short-term study of 48 weeks, the results of the present study indicate that alendronate at the daily dose of 5 mg was effective in increasing LBMD and that no serious drug-related adverse events were observed in the alendronate-treated patients. Alendronate is more efficacious than alfacalcidol in increasing bone mineral density, although the mechanisms of the actions of the two drugs are apparently different.
We studied osmoregulation of plasma vasopressin (AVP) in eight patients with untreated myxedema due to primary hypothyroidism. All patients had severe thyroid hormone deficiency due to chronic thyroiditis and had been receiving no medication at the time of this study. AVP release was defined by 5% hypertonic saline infusion test in all patients, and urinary diluting capacity was estimated by the iv water-loading tests in five patients. Plasma AVP was measured by sensitive and specific RIA. The mean basal plasma AVP level in the patients (0.5 +/- 0.1 pmol/L) was significantly lower (P less than 0.01) than that in normal adults (2.5 +/- 0.5 pmol/L). During hypertonic saline infusion, the rise in plasma AVP was normal or subnormal in all patients. In two patients who showed mild to moderate hyponatremia in the basal state and mild urinary diluting defect during water loading, plasma AVP was appropriately suppressed in each case. These results indicate that inappropriate elevation of plasma AVP is not common in myxedema, and that impaired water excretion is due mainly to AVP-independent mechanisms.
We evaluated 16 Guamanian Chamorros with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and 33 patients with parkinsonism-dementia for disturbances of calcium and vitamin D metabolism. The serum immunoreactive parathyroid hormone level was mildly elevated in 6 patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and in 5 patients with parkinsonism-dementia. There were significant positive correlations between serum immunoreactive parathyroid levels and duration of illness in male patients with motor neuron disease, but not in female patients or in patients with parkinsonism-dementia. Intestinal absorption of calcium, as assessed by serum and urinary activity of calcium 47 following oral administration, was decreased in 2 patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and in 4 patients with parkinsonism-dementia, all of whom had low levels of serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D. Reductions in cortical bone mass were striking in patients with motor neuron disease. A significant negative correlation was found between the percentage of cortical area of the second metacarpal bone and muscle atrophy and weakness, and significant positive correlations were found between degree of immobility and ratio of urinary hydroxyproline to creatinine in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and parkinsonism-dementia. In general, abnormalities in calcium metabolism were subtle. Thus, if the demonstrated deposition of metals, particularly calcium and aluminum, in central nervous system tissues of Guamanians with these two conditions is a cause of the diseases and of the early appearance of neurofibrillary tangles in neurons, the accumulation has apparently occurred long before onset of symptoms, and detectable abnormalities of calcium and vitamin D metabolism may already have been corrected.
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