Bone Disease in Alcohol Abuse
- DANIEL D. BIKLE, M.D., Ph.D.;
- HARRY K. GENANT, M.D.;
- CHRISTOPHER CANN, Ph.D.;
- ROBERT R. RECKER, M.D.;
- BERNARD P. HALLORAN, Ph.D.; and
- GORDON J. STREWLER, M.D.
Abstract
We evaluated bone disease in eight white men between the ages of 49 and 61 years who had been abusing alcohol for at least 10 years. The mean density of vertebral cancellous bone was 58% of normal, whereas the mean density of appendicular cortical bone was 90% of normal. Marked reduction in active bone resorption and bone formation was seen without evidence of osteomalacia. Serum levels of calcium and magnesium were in the lower range of normal; serum levels of phosphorus, calcifediol, and calcitriol were normal; and serum levels of parathyroid hormone and nephrogenous cyclic adenosine monophosphate were in the higher range of normal. These data suggest that bone disease in these subjects is not due to inhibition of parathyroid hormone secretion or function, or abnormal vitamin D metabolism, but to an inhibition of bone remodeling by a mechanism independent of the calciotropic hormones.
Article and Author Information
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▸From the Department of Medicine, Veterans Administration Medical Center and University of California, and the Departments of Physiology and Radiology, University of California, San Francisco, California; and the Department of Medicine, Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska.
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Grant support: in part by a grant from the Veterans Administration, and grant AM 28116 from the National Institutes of Health.
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▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Daniel D. Bikle, M.D., Ph.D.; Veterans Administration Medical Center (111N), 4150 Clement Street; San Francisco, CA 94121.
- © 1985 American College of Physicians
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