A new tracer method for the calculation of rates of bone formation and breakdown in osteoporosis and other generalised skeletal disorders.
- 22 December 1976
- journal article
- Vol. 22 (2) , 191-206
Abstract
1. Evidence has accumulated that the rate of accretion (A) of calcium to bone is the sum of two fluxes; apposition involving the laying down of new bone and augmentation which is the result of slow exchange of non-surface bone calcium with plasma calcium pools as the result of solid state diffusion. 2. A method has been devised for separating A into its two components. It requires the use of 45Ca or, for clinical studies, 85Sr as a calcium tracer. Studies which are initiated with a combined accretion rate--calcium balance study, are concluded with an estimate of the exponent of the power function which has been found to describe the whole body retention of tracer from the second month onward. 3. The impulse response function of the skeleton for the tracer is then calculated, making the assumption that in any uniform volume of bone, osteoclastic resorption is a first order process. Making in addition certain simplifying assumptions, which are shown to have a modest influence on the final results, a mean rate of bone resorption can be calculated using a development of the well known Stewart-Hamilton formula. The apposition rate is calculated as the sum of the resorption rate and the calcium balance. Augmentation and diminution, defined as equal and opposite exchange processes, are given by the difference between A and the apposition rate. 4. The results of our first thirteen studies in normal subjects and patients with metabolic bone disease are presented, together with analyses of some data from the literature. It is concluded that the development of an atraumatic method for measuring rates of bone formation and resorption in the whole body would be an important advance in the study of metabolic bone disease, and this work is presented so that critical comparisons may be initiated between this tracer method and independent histological methods for measuring these parameters.This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- A model-independent comparison of the rates of uptake and short term retention of47Ca and85Sr by the skeletonCalcified Tissue International, 1977
- A new method for calculating the accretion rate of bone calcium and some observations on the suitability of strontium-85 as a tracer for bone calciumCalcified Tissue International, 1976
- The estimation of total skeletal mass from bone densitometry measurements using 60 keV photonsThe British Journal of Radiology, 1973
- Diffusion von45Ca,85Sr und32P in HydroxylapatitRadiation and Environmental Biophysics, 1973
- Retention of radium in man.1969
- Bone Turnover Model based on a Continuously Expanding Exchangeable Calcium PoolNature, 1969
- Distribution of Radioactive Calcium, Strontium, Barium and Radium Following Intravenous Injection into a Healthy ManInternational Journal of Radiation Biology and Related Studies in Physics, Chemistry and Medicine, 1968
- Human Bone Metabolism Inferred from Fall-Out InvestigationsNature, 1965
- CALCIUM ACCRETION AND BONE FORMATION IN DOGS: AN EXPERIMENTAL COMPARISON BETWEEN THE RESULTS OF CA-45 KINETIC ANALYSIS AND TETRACYCLINE LABELLING.1965
- Excretion and Retention of Radioactive Strontium in Normal Men Following a Single Intravenous InjectionInternational Journal of Radiation Biology and Related Studies in Physics, Chemistry and Medicine, 1960