Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis has hitherto been mainly assessed in patients with clinically recognized vertebral fractures. Our study aimed to investigate the QOL perception in 361 asymptomatic ambulant postmenopausal women who came to our center for an osteoporosis screening program planned with their general practitioners. The Quality of Life Questionnaire of the European Foundation for Osteoporosis (QUALEFFO) was administered to all subjects. The participants underwent bone mineral density (BMD) measurements by DXA of either the lumbar spine and/or the femoral neck, as well as X-ray examination of the thoracolumbar spine to identify subclinical vertebral fractures. According to the WHO definition, where subjects are subdivided by BMD values into three groups (women with normal BMD, osteopenia, and osteoporosis), a significant difference was found only for the domains which explore general health perception (p<0.01 by ANOVA) and mental function (p<0.001 by ANOVA). When we segregated both osteopenic and osteoporotic women according to whether or not they had vertebral fractures, a significant difference was found only in osteoporotic patients for domains which explore physical function (p<0.001), social function (p<0.001), general health perception (p<0.02), and total QUALEFFO score (p<0.01). Stepwise multiple logistic regression analysis of the whole sample showed that both vertebral fractures and a low femoral BMD impairs QOL perception, while age did not exert a significant influence. ROC curves analysis demonstrated a low discriminating capacity of individual domains and total QUALEFFO score for both vertebral deformities and BMD categorization. Our results showed that QUALEFFO is not able to discriminate between patients with or without subclinical vertebral fractures. However, some aspects of QOL appear to be impaired in patients with subclinical vertebral fractures or reduced BMD.
We describe a patient with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 characterized by the simultaneous occurrence of parathyroid cancer, parathyroid adenomas, and pancreatic gastrinoma, who presented with an episode of acute hypercalcemia. The rapid parathyroid hormone assay provided a basis for the diagnosis of parathyroid hyperfunction. Mediastinal metastasis of the parathyroid carcinoma was found at autopsy. However, the staining of pancreatic and gastric tissue for parathyroid hormone-related protein does not make it possible to exclude completely the contribution of this peptide in mediating the hypercalcemia. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of parathyroid carcinoma as part of the multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 syndrome.
Our data indicate that in primary hyperparathyroidism patients the influence of 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels on bone mineral density, if any, was overwhelmed by the effects of parathyroid hormone excess, age and body mass index. The latter unequally affected bone mineral density of various measured sites with different composition.
), which uses antibodies against epitopes 1-4 and 39 -84 (PTH-W) and epitopes 7-34 and 39 -84 (PTH-T).We also assayed serum PTH in 10 PHPT patients every 24 h for 5 days after successful surgery. Results: The different assays gave serum PTH values that were >2 SD higher than values for the control population in 59% (PTH-S), 77% (PTH-W), and 82% (PTH-T) of patients with PHPT. However, ROC curve analysis showed no significant differences among the three PTH assays, demonstrating overlapping diagnostic sensitivities. In PHPT patients, the correlation among the assays was highly significant (r ؍ 0.91-0.92; P <0.001). The ratio PTH-W:PTH-T ؋ 100 showed a gaus-
To assess how two different serum markers of bone resorption may reflect changes in bone turnover, we compared age- and sex-related changes in serum C-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen (betaCTx) and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase activity (TRAP) in 136 healthy men and 184 normal women. Serum levels of the two markers were also assessed in several groups of patients of both sexes presenting with the most common metabolic and endocrine bone diseases: established osteoporosis (n = 77), primary hyperparathyroidism (n = 44), glucocorticoid excess (n = 17), chronic renal failure (n = 39), active Paget's disease of bone (n = 5), humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy (n = 3), osteomalacia (n = 3), hyperthyroidism (n = 10), post-surgical hypoparathyroidism (n = 10), acromegaly (active disease, n = 8) and Cushing's syndrome (n = 10). In men the regression of betaCTx with age showed an initial decrease in bone resorption followed by an increase thereafter, starting from the sixth decade of life. No age-related change in serum TRAP activity was observed. In women, by contrast, a slight but significant linear correlation of both serum betaCTx and TRAP with age (r = 0.223, p<0.003 and r = 0.333, p<0.0001, respectively) was found, the two markers being positively correlated (r = 0.238, p<0.002). In each class of patients the mean Z-scores of betaCTx were significantly higher than those of TRAP activity. Moreover, compared with normal subjects, serum betaCTx seems to be characterized by a superior sensitivity relative to TRAP measurement, at least in the disorders studied.
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