PAGET'S DISEASE OF BONE EXPERIENCES WITH 100 PATIENTS TREATED WITH SALMON CALCITONIN ∗
- 1 September 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AMPCo in The Medical Journal of Australia
- Vol. 2 (6) , 278-280
- https://doi.org/10.5694/j.1326-5377.1981.tb128316.x
Abstract
One hundred patients with Paget's disease of bone were treated with salmon calcitonin. Seventy per cent of patients who presented with pain reported improvement in symptoms. Side effects which occurred in 53 patients were more severe in women, necessitating the withdrawal of therapy in 30% of women as against 7.5% of men. Five of the patients with intolerable side effects were subsequently able to tolerate porcine calcitonin, while six were unable to tolerate salmon, porcine or human calcitonin. No audio‐logical improvement occurred. Aortic valve lesions were detected in 11 patients. After a mean treatment period of 7.8 months, serum alkaline phosphatase level was reduced by 39.3%. Total 24‐hour urinary hydroxyproline was reduced by 46.1% after 11.2 months of treatment.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Salmon calcitonin therapy for paget's disease of bone the problem of acquired clinical resistanceArthritis & Rheumatism, 1980
- Effect of calcitonin in deafness due to Paget's disease of skull.BMJ, 1979
- PORCINE CALCITONIN IN THE TREATMENT OF PAGET'S DISEASE OF BONE EXPERIENCE WITH 32 PATIENTSThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1977
- Response of Paget's disease to porcine and salmon calcitonins: Effects of long-term treatmentThe American Journal of Medicine, 1974