Plasma osteocalcin has been proposed as a useful and convenient biochemical marker of bone formation. However, the effect on plasma osteocalcin due to variations in the rate of its removal from the circulation has been little investigated. We have measured the metabolic clearance rate of plasma osteocalcin in adult oophorectomized sheep.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 50-year-old Vietnamese man suffered recurrent episodes of hypokalemic periodic paralysis during treatment for thyrotoxicosis. Suspected precipitants of the paralysis were oral prednisolone, strenuous exertion and poor compliance with medications. Propranolol prevented the periodic paralysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAfter intravenous injection, labeled bovine osteocalcin was rapidly removed from rat plasma and taken up mainly by kidney, liver, and bone. The rate of disappearance was slowed by nephrectomy but not as much by ureteric ligation, suggesting renal destruction of osteocalcin rather than renal excretion. Both liver and kidney tissue rapidly degraded osteocalcin, both in vivo and in vitro.
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