The effects of oral alendronate treatment on spinal bone mineral density and biochemical markers of bone turnover were assessed in women in the early postmenopausal period. Sixty-five women were treated with placebo or 5, 20, or 40 mg alendronate daily for 6 weeks in a double blind study. Treatment with alendronate decreased both urinary markers of bone resorption (pyridinolines, hydroxyproline, and calcium) and serum markers of bone formation (osteocalcin and alkaline phosphatase) in a dose-dependent fashion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo determine the physiological role of circulating cholecystokinin (CCK), the effect of the CCK receptor antagonist MK-329 on upper digestive processes was investigated in six normal volunteers after a mixed meal. In a double-blind, two-period, randomized crossover design, the subjects received either 10 mg MK-329 or placebo orally 3 hours 15 minutes before the meal, which contained 51CrCl3 as food marker. A five-lumen tube with the tip in the distal duodenum allowed continuous marker infusion (57Co-B12) and duodenal aspiration as well as recordings of antral and duodenal motility patterns via three pressure sensors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bone Miner Res
January 1992
We report a randomized placebo-controlled double-blind study of amino-hydroxybutylidene bisphosphonate (alendronate), infused over 1 h, in 15 patients with Paget's disease of bone. Alendronate, 10 mg/day for 5 days, suppressed urinary hydroxyproline to 44.9 +/- 4.
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