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. 1980 Jul;13(1):57-67.
doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2265.1980.tb01023.x.

Studies of circulating parathyroid hormone in man using a homologous amino-terminal specific immunoradiometric assay

Studies of circulating parathyroid hormone in man using a homologous amino-terminal specific immunoradiometric assay

S E Papapoulos et al. Clin Endocrinol (Oxf). 1980 Jul.

Abstract

Circulating immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (PTH) was measured by a homologous, amino-terminal, specific, immunoradiometric assay in man. In forty-two healthy subjects the concentrations ranged between < 40 pg/ml and 120 pg/ml. No hormone could be detected in the sera of eleven patients with hypoparathyroidism, but the concentrations were clearly elevated in six patients with pseudohypoparathyroidism (range 190-1120 pg/ml). In thirty-five patients with primary hyperparathyroidism the mean (+/- SEM) concentration was 283.4 +/- 42.4 pg/ml (range 100-1350 pg/ml). A significant positive correlation was demonstrated between immunoassayable hormone and serum calcium concentrations in these patients. In nine patients PTH concentrations were measured before and after parathyroidectomy. In all of them they were elevated pre-operatively but fell to the normal range after parathyroidectomy. The disappearance of exogenously administered synthetic human PTH (1-34) from the circulation of two normal subjects was rapid with an apparent plasma half-disappearance time (t1/2) between 2 and 3 min; the metabolic clearance rate was 12.9 and 9.0 ml. kg-1 . min-1 respectively. Similarly, the disappearance of endogenous, amino-terminal, immunoreactive PTH from the circulation of two patients with primary hyperparathyroidism after parathyroidectomy was rapid; the apparent t1/2 was approximately 3 min. Homologous amino-terminal specific immunoassays for PTH can thus be useful for the study of both the acute, and chronic, changes of circulating hormone in man and represent an improvement over heterologous unselected assay systems.

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