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The Effects of Exogenous Parathyroid Hormone on Plasma and Urinary Adenosine 3′,5′-Cyclic Monophosphate in Man
42
Citations
14
References
1974
Year
Bovine Parathyroid HormoneElectrolyte DisorderParathyroid DiseasePlasma Cyclic AmpParathyroid GlandIntegrative PhysiologyReproductive EndocrinologyMolecular PharmacologyParathyroid HormoneClinical ChemistryAnimal PhysiologySodium HomeostasisCyclic AmpEndocrinologyPharmacologyPotassium HomeostasisUrologyPhysiologyExogenous Parathyroid HormoneAldosterone PhysiologyMedicineEndocrine Disease
1. Administration of highly purified bovine parathyroid hormone (BPTH) (200 MRC units) increased the concentration of adenosine 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) in the peripheral plasma of normal subjects within minutes, whether the hormone was given as a bolus injection or an infusion. 2. The subsequent disappearance of cyclic AMP from the circulation was also rapid (t1/2 = 14 min) and was associated with a prompt decline (t1/2 = 4.6 min) in the concentration of the ammo-terminal part of BPTH, as measured in a region-specific immunoradiometric assay. 3. The concentration of cyclic AMP in plasma from a renal vein was found to increase more rapidly and to reach a greater peak than plasma from a peripheral vein. 4. The administration of BPTH to anephric subjects caused no increase in cyclic AMP. 5. These investigations indicate that parathyroid hormone can act extremely rapidly, with a short half-life, and that the kidney makes a major contribution to the changes in plasma cyclic AMP induced by the hormone. In addition, they form the basis for the development of a simplified Ellsworth—Howard test, using changes in circulating cyclic AMP after BPTH administration as an index of responsiveness to the hormone.
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