Bone mineral loss during lactation occurs in absence of parathyroid tissue

1992 
The requirement of parathyroid tissue for bone mineral loss during lactation was investigated. Lactating rats parathyroidectomized (PTX) at day 2 of lactation and consuming a 2% calcium diet are hypercalcemic and hypophosphatemic at day 13 of lactation. The high-calcium diet supports normal growth of pups nursing PTX mothers. PTX lactating rats mobilize bone mineral to the same extent as euparathyroid lactating rats consuming the same diet. Non-lactating PTX rats lose no bone mineral over a similar time period, indicating lactation-specific bone mineral mobilization in the absence of parathyroid tissue. PTX rats were verified to have physiologically insignificant amounts of parathyroid tissue, as evidenced by severe hypocalcemia and/or death in each rat after a shift from a 2% calcium to a 0.02% calcium diet. These results conclusively demonstrate that lactation-associated bone mineral mobilization does not require parathyroid hormone or parathyroid tissue.
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