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Hormone replacement therapy may reduce the return of endogenous lead from bone to the circulation.

Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in postmenopausal women suppresses the increase in bone resorption expected as circulating levels of endogenous estrogen decline. We tested the hypothesis that bone lead content might remain elevated in women on HRT. Fifty six women who at recruitment were on averag...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Webber, C E, Chettle, D R, Bowins, R J, Beaumont, L F, Gordon, C L, Song, X, Blake, J M, McNutt, R H
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1995
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1519246/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8747022
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author Webber, C E
Chettle, D R
Bowins, R J
Beaumont, L F
Gordon, C L
Song, X
Blake, J M
McNutt, R H
author_facet Webber, C E
Chettle, D R
Bowins, R J
Beaumont, L F
Gordon, C L
Song, X
Blake, J M
McNutt, R H
author_sort Webber, C E
collection PubMed
description Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in postmenopausal women suppresses the increase in bone resorption expected as circulating levels of endogenous estrogen decline. We tested the hypothesis that bone lead content might remain elevated in women on HRT. Fifty six women who at recruitment were on average 35 years postmenopausal were placed on calcium supplementation. Six months later 33 of these women were prescribed either low dose or moderate dose hormone replacement in addition to the calcium supplementation. After approximately 4 years of hormone replacement, lead content was measured at the tibia and calcaneus by in vivo fluorescence excitation, and lead concentrations were measured in serum, whole blood, and urine. Women not taking hormones had significantly lower lead concentrations in cortical bone compared to all women on HRT (p = 0.007). Tibia lead content (mean +/- SD) for women on calcium only was 11.13 +/- 6.22 microgram/g bone mineral. For women on HRT, tibia bone lead was 19.37 +/- 8.62 micrograms/g bone mineral on low-dose HRT and 16.87 +/- 11.68 micrograms/g bone mineral on moderate-dose HRT. There were no differences between groups for lead concentrations measured in trabecular bone, whole blood, serum or urine. Hormone replacement maintains cortical bone lead content. In women not on HRT, there will be a perimenopausal release of lead from bone.
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spelling pubmed-15192462006-07-28 Hormone replacement therapy may reduce the return of endogenous lead from bone to the circulation. Webber, C E Chettle, D R Bowins, R J Beaumont, L F Gordon, C L Song, X Blake, J M McNutt, R H Environ Health Perspect Research Article Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in postmenopausal women suppresses the increase in bone resorption expected as circulating levels of endogenous estrogen decline. We tested the hypothesis that bone lead content might remain elevated in women on HRT. Fifty six women who at recruitment were on average 35 years postmenopausal were placed on calcium supplementation. Six months later 33 of these women were prescribed either low dose or moderate dose hormone replacement in addition to the calcium supplementation. After approximately 4 years of hormone replacement, lead content was measured at the tibia and calcaneus by in vivo fluorescence excitation, and lead concentrations were measured in serum, whole blood, and urine. Women not taking hormones had significantly lower lead concentrations in cortical bone compared to all women on HRT (p = 0.007). Tibia lead content (mean +/- SD) for women on calcium only was 11.13 +/- 6.22 microgram/g bone mineral. For women on HRT, tibia bone lead was 19.37 +/- 8.62 micrograms/g bone mineral on low-dose HRT and 16.87 +/- 11.68 micrograms/g bone mineral on moderate-dose HRT. There were no differences between groups for lead concentrations measured in trabecular bone, whole blood, serum or urine. Hormone replacement maintains cortical bone lead content. In women not on HRT, there will be a perimenopausal release of lead from bone. 1995-12 /pmc/articles/PMC1519246/ /pubmed/8747022 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Webber, C E
Chettle, D R
Bowins, R J
Beaumont, L F
Gordon, C L
Song, X
Blake, J M
McNutt, R H
Hormone replacement therapy may reduce the return of endogenous lead from bone to the circulation.
title Hormone replacement therapy may reduce the return of endogenous lead from bone to the circulation.
title_full Hormone replacement therapy may reduce the return of endogenous lead from bone to the circulation.
title_fullStr Hormone replacement therapy may reduce the return of endogenous lead from bone to the circulation.
title_full_unstemmed Hormone replacement therapy may reduce the return of endogenous lead from bone to the circulation.
title_short Hormone replacement therapy may reduce the return of endogenous lead from bone to the circulation.
title_sort hormone replacement therapy may reduce the return of endogenous lead from bone to the circulation.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1519246/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8747022
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