Abstract: | Plasma levels of 25-hydroxycalciferol (25-OH-D), 47-calcium intestinal absorption, bone mineral content and the biologic parameters of phospho-calcium metabolism were studied in 30 chronic alcoholics, 15 with Laennec's cirrhosis (group A) and 15 without (group B). These patients were compared with 27 normal subjects. In group A, the mean 25-OH-D plasma level was 23.7 +/- SD 18.5 microgram/l and in group B 35.2 +/- SD 21.8 microgram/l. These mean levels were lower than those of the control group, which were 57.2 +/- SD 22.5 microgram/l (p less than 0.001). The mean value of the 47Ca intestinal absorption, measured as the percentage of the ingested dose per litre of plasma and multiplied by the body weight, was also significantly lower in group A, which was 140 +/- SD 47 (p less than 0.01), and in group B, which was 145 +/- SD 69 (p less than 0.05), compared with the normal subjects whose average was 182 +/- SD 45.6. Similarly, the total plasma calcium was low: 1.99 +/- SD 0.24 mmol/l in all the alcoholics, while that of the control group was 2.22 +/- SD 0.18 mmol/l (p less than 0.001). For the 30 chronic alcoholics there was a positive correlation between 25-OH-D and 47Ca intestinal absorption, (r = 0.484; p less than 0.004). This suggests that in chronic alcoholism the deficiency of 25-OH-D induces a diminution of the intestinal absorption of calcium which, in the long term, can result in bone demineralization evidenced in the patients studied by a bone mineral content lower than normal (p less than 0.001). |