Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

SKELETAL DYNAMICS IN MAN MEASURED BY NONRADIOACTIVE STRONTIUM

Journal Article · · Journal of Clinical Investigation (U.S.)
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI104405· OSTI ID:4839351

Skeletal dynamics were calculated by usual dilution formulas, using stable strontium as a tracer, in 25 normal subjects, 14 athletes, 26 patients with postmenopausal osteoporosis, 28 with primary hyperparathyroidism, 3 with hyperadrenocorticism 8 with acromegaly, 7 with thyrotoxicosis, 11 with urclithiasis, 5 with Paget's disease of bone. and 1 with vitamin D poisoning. The technic requires that 10 mEq of strontium gluconate be injected intravenously and blood and urine concentrations be measured for 4 to 6 days. In normal subjects the rapidly miscible pool was equivalent to 42.7 + 1.1 L of serum, turning over at a rate of 13.5 plus or minus 0.6 L daily, of which 3.9 + 0.2 L was excreted by the kidney and 9.6 + 0.4 L went to bone. Since only approximately 2.5% of the pool is excreted in the feces daily, fecal excretion was not measured routinely. Good reproducibility was found in 21 duplicate studies. Intense muscular exercise (athletes) was found to expand the pool greatly and to accelerate the rate of deposition in bone. Kinetically, two divergent types of osteoporosis were differentiated. A small pool and low rate of bone deposition were found in postmenopausal osteoporosis and Cushing's disease of long duration. The large pool and rapid rate of bone deposition in thyrotoxicosis was confirmed and also found in acromegaly. In these two, excessive bone resorption is postulated. Urinary excretion rate was excessive in Cushing's disease, thyrotoxicosis, and acromegaly. In hyperparathyroidism with clinically evident osteitis, expanded pools, greatly increased turnover, urinary excretion, and bone deposition rates were confirmed. In patients with normal roentgenographic appearance and phosphatase, bone involvement was shown by slight increase in bone deposition rate and microscopic foci of resorption on iliac crest biopsy. In seven patients without histological foci of resorption, the bone deposition rate was not increased. (auth)

Research Organization:
Univ. of California School of Medicine, San Francisco
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
NSA Number:
NSA-15-031968
OSTI ID:
4839351
Journal Information:
Journal of Clinical Investigation (U.S.), Journal Name: Journal of Clinical Investigation (U.S.) Vol. Vol: 40; ISSN JCINA
Country of Publication:
Country unknown/Code not available
Language:
English

Similar Records

Strontium and calcium metabolism in metabolis bone diseases
Journal Article · Wed Jun 01 00:00:00 EDT 1960 · Journal of Clinical Investigation · OSTI ID:4156545

Metabolic activity of sodium, measured by neutron activation, in the hands of patients suffering from bone diseases: concise communication
Journal Article · Mon Dec 31 23:00:00 EST 1979 · J. Nucl. Med.; (United States) · OSTI ID:5342888

Quantitation of calcium metabolism in postmenopausal osteoporosis and in scoliosis
Journal Article · Sat Jun 01 00:00:00 EDT 1963 · Journal of Clinical Investigation · OSTI ID:4701844