Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (alkaline phosphatase)
47,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A longitudinal study was performed to document the effect of surgical menopause and postmenopausal etidronate disodium therapy on several nonhistomorphometric indices of bone turnover. Twenty healthy, premenopausal women undergoing oophorectomy for nonmalignant conditions were studied preoperatively and at 3 monthly intervals postoperatively. Sequential measurements of serum calcium (Ca), alkaline phosphatase (AP), bone Gla protein (BGP), and urinary calcium and hydroxyproline excretion, expressed as a ratio of urinary creatinine (UCa/Cr and UOHp/Cr, respectively) were obtained. Twenty-four-hour whole body retention of diphosphonate (WBR) and radial bone density were also measured. When a postoperative increase in bone turnover was observed, patients were randomized to receive either 400 mg etidronate disodium daily or placebo for 3 months. Oophorectomy was associated with a significant increase in WBR, Ca, AP, and BGP and an insignificant rise in UCa/Cr. A variable pattern of UOHp/Cr was seen. Patients on placebo maintained these elevated levels of Ca, BGP, and UCa/Cr. WBR and AP continued to rise. Etidronate disodium therapy resulted in a fall towards premenopausal levels in WBR, Ca, and UCa/Cr. AP and BGP were unchanged. Three months after stopping etidronate, BGP fell significantly and the decrease in Ca was maintained; however, WBR and UCa/Cr had returned towards pretreatment values. Bone density measurements did not change significantly. An increase in several of the indices of bone turnover was seen following oophorectomy. Etidronate disodium suppressed this increase, affecting indices of both resorption and formation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of etidronate disodium on bone turnover following surgical menopause. 249 93

We treated a patient with an unusual bone disease at least partly associated with Chinese herbs. Seven years after 65-year-old man had begun to consume Chinese herbs, multifocal osteoarthralgias were noted, and the patient was hospitalized for renal dysfunction (serum creatinine, 2.8 mg/dl; urea nitrogen, 19 mg/dl). Fanconi syndrome also was apparent. A renal biopsy specimen showed tubulo-interstitial fibrosis. Chinese herbs were discontinued and prednisolone was started, but bone and joint pain as well as renal function gradually worsened. Four years later, creatinine was 9.0 mg/dl and alkaline phosphatase was 571 IU/l. As bone scintigraphy revealed localized asymmetric lesions, Paget's disease of bone was suspected at first. However, neither osteosclerosis nor hypertrophy was seen in radiographs. Based on a bone specimen histology we diagnosed as mixed-type renal osteodystrophy including osteomalacia and osteitis fibrosa. Mosaic pattern of cement lines was not present. This case was not compatible with either Paget's disease or typical renal osteodystrophy as seen in dialysis patients. Etidronate disodium was effective in alleviating bone symptoms. The patient's bone disorder may be a new disease at least partly related to Chinese herbs independently of nephropathy.
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PMID:Chinese herbs and bone disease. 1272 24