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(PTH) axis may be important in the pathogenesis of glucose intolerance and insulin resistance in uraemia. To investigate possible relationships between hyperparathyroidism, intracellular free cal-cium (Ca2+,), and glucose tolerance in chronic renal failure, we measured serum intact PTH (I-PTH) by two-site immunometric assay, platelet Ca2+, using the fluorescent indicator fura-2, and plasma glucose and insulin after 14 h overnight fast and at 30, 60 and 120 min following a 75 g oral glucose load, in 18 chronic haemodialysis patients with elev-ated serum I-PTH. Calcitriol (1 fig) was administered parenterally at the end of each dialysis session for four weeks. This significantly decreased serum I-PTH (p0.001) and platelet Ca2+, (p0.01). Uraemic patients initially showed marked glucose intoler-ance, with increased area below the glucose curve compared to healthy controls, but after 4 weeks of calcitriol treatment, this effect was significantly decreased, and there was a significant rise in the area under the insulin curve after glucose load. The insulinogenic index also increased significantly after calcitriol treatment. These data suggest that calcitriol treatment of haemodialysis patient with secondary hyperparathy-roidism is associated with increased insulin secretion in response to glucose challenge, and that this change is linked to the decrease in intracellular free calcium.
A Sat, study studied this question.