Literature DB >> 9312397

Calcitriol and bone mass accumulation in females during puberty.

J Z Ilich1, N E Badenhop, T Jelic, A C Clairmont, L A Nagode, V Matkovic.   

Abstract

Adolescence is characterized by rapid skeletal development and high demands for bone minerals. Though the stimulative effect of calcitriol on intestinal calcium and phosphorus absorption is well understood, its effect on bone development is not completely clear. It may be directly involved in the facilitation of calcium economy during this critical phase of skeletal development. Therefore, we evaluated the serum concentrations of calcitriol in relation to skeletal development in a cross-sectional study of 178 healthy Caucasian females during different pubertal stages, extending from childhood to young adulthood. In addition, a subsample of 57 younger girls was followed for a 1-year period to evaluate the association among serum calcitriol, nutrition parameters (dietary calcium, phosphorus, and vitamin D), bone mass accumulation, and biochemical markers of bone turnover. The serum calcitriol concentration in a cross-sectional sample was the highest during pubertal growth spurt (sexual maturity index 3-4, age 11-13 years) (ANOVA; F = 2.4945; P = 0.0329). This correlated to the peak skeletal calcium accretion (g/year) and bone mass accumulation in total body and forearm. In a longitudinal sample, there was a positive association between annual change in TBBMC (P = 0.0255); TBBMD (P = 0.0168); proximal radius (1/3 distance from styloid process) BMC (P = 0.0096); BMD (P = 0.0541), and baseline calcitriol level in forward stepwise regression analyses. The results of the forward stepwise regression analyses with serum calcitriol as a dependent variable and different serum, urinary, and dietary parameters measured at baseline (age 11 years, n = 114) and after 1 year (age 12 years, n = 57) showed that osteocalcin was positively associated with calcitriol in both years; more so in a second year (P = 0.0514, P < 0.001, respectively). Dietary vitamin D and phosphorus showed negative association with serum calcitriol at age 11, and dietary Ca and P were selected at age 12. The results of this study show that calcitriol is a significant correlate of bone mass accumulation during pubertal growth, presumably in response to the high requirements for calcium during this critical phase of skeletal development.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9312397     DOI: 10.1007/s002239900304

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Calcif Tissue Int        ISSN: 0171-967X            Impact factor:   4.333


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