High bone turnover persisting after vitamin D repletion: beware of calcium deficiency

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 24 - Trang 2359-2363 - 2013
M.-H. Lafage-Proust1,2, L. Lieben3, G. Carmeliet3, C. Soler4, C. Cusset2, L. Vico1, T. Thomas1,2
1INSERM U1059, Université de Lyon, Saint-Etienne, France
2Rheumatology Department, University Hospital, Saint-Etienne, France
3Clinical and Experimental Endocrinology, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
4Centre d’Imagerie Nucléaire, C.H.P.L., Saint-Etienne, France

Tóm tắt

Treatment of vitamin D deficiency with vitamin D is a common procedure when taking care of elderly patients, calcium supplementation being added only when calcium dietary intake is insufficient. Here, we report the case of a 58-year-old female who was referred to our unit because of suspicion of Paget’s disease of the skull, based on elevated serum alkaline phosphatase and high skull methylene diphosphonate-technetium uptake. She had been prescribed cholecalciferol (100,000 IU/month) and calcium salts for the past 7 months after discovery of severe vitamin D deficiency by her primary care physician. No specific skull bone lesions were observed on both X-ray and computerized tomography. Serum calcium, phosphate and 25(OH) vitamin D levels were normal, while serum C-terminal cross-linked telopeptide, bone alkaline phosphatase and calcitriol were high and daily urinary calcium excretion was low. We found that she had not been compliant with the calcium prescription while vitamin D had been thoroughly taken. We suspected osteomalacia due to calcium deficiency. Both skull uptake and biological abnormalities normalised in few months after adding calcium supplementation to the vitamin D treatment, and spine bone mineral density increased by 9.5 % after 14 months of full treatment. The present case illustrates the necessity for adequate calcium intake during vitamin D repletion to normalise bone mineralisation and turnover and maintain the skeletal integrity.

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