Gertner J M, Brenton D B, Edwards R H
Clin Endocrinol (Oxf). 1977 Dec;7 Suppl:239s-244s. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2265.1977.tb03388.x.
Five patients with nutritional osteomalacia or rickets and six children with rickets unresponsive to physiological doses of vitamin D were treated with 1alpha-hydroxyvitamin D3 (1alpha-OHD3). Patients with nutritional osteomalacia responded to 1--2 microgram/day of 1alpha-OHD3. The most striking findings were rises in plasma calcium and, in one case, a decrease in faecal calcium. In some cases there was a rise in plasma phosphorus, alkaline phosphatase remained unchanged. There was radiological healing. In three patients with cystinosis and one with hypophosphataemia and Barrter's syndrome 2 microgram of 1alpha-OHD3 produced healing of rickets. Plasma phosphate rose on treatment, possibly by a suppression of parathyroid activity. The response to such low doses of 1alpha-OHD3 suggests impaired 1alpha-hydroxylation of 25-hydroxyvitamin D in these patients. A patient with intestinal malabsorption was resistant to high doses of 1alpha-OHD3 by mouth but responded to parenteral administration. A boy with osteopetrosis and the biochemical changes of rickets was resistant to large doses of 1alpha-OHD3 presumably because of failure of osseous response.