Menopausal osteoporotic women (age: 49-69, mean: 59.5 years) with crush fractures of the spine were treated with low doses of calcitonin (Miacalcic, 350 U/month), or with calcitonin + anabolic steroid (Retabolil, 50 mg/month). Efficacy of the therapy was controlled by single foton absorptiometry of midshaft and distal radius, by X-ray morphometry and by registering new crush fractures of the spine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPatterns of bone loss in the axial and the appendicular skeleton were studied in 48 women with streak gonad syndrome (age: between 14-38 years, mean: 25.5 years). Bone mineral content was measured in vivo at the lumbar spine and right femoral neck by dual photon absorptiometry and at the midradius and distal radius by single photon absorptiometry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForty-five postmenopausal osteoporotic women with at least one osteoporotic vertebral crush fracture were randomized into three treatment groups. Each patient was on calcitonin, 50 U, on alternate days for 2 weeks monthly (350 U/month), and 500 mg/day oral calcium supplementation. In group II, this therapy was supplemented with phosphate (750 mg/day), and in group III, norandrostenolone decanoate (50 mg/month) was added to the calcitonin+calcium therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOsteoporosis is one of the most common complications of streak gonad syndrome (SGS), however its pathogenesis is still unclear. Bone Gla protein (BGP) has been found to be a serum marker of bone turnover in various metabolic disease states. In the present study serum BGP and alkaline phosphatase (AP) were measured in 13 osteoporotic patients with SGS and in 56 healthy women.
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