Evaluation of bone turnover in type I osteoporosis using biochemical markers specific for both bone formation and bone resorption

Abstract
The aims of the study were to evaluate the use of bone-specific biochemical markers of turnover in type I osteoporosis, to test for evidence of heterogeneity of bone turnover in this condition, and to attempt to devise an ‘uncoupling index’ by using the relationship between bone-specific biochemical markers of bone formation and bone resorption. In women with type I osteoporosis (mean age 64 years, SD 5;n=63) the mean level of serum osteocalcin, a specific biochemical marker of bone formation, was 9.9 ng/ml (SD 2.0), which was higher than the level in normal postmenopausal women (mean age 65 years, SD 6;n=8.9 ng/ml (SD 2.0;pppppppz-scores. We conclude that the pyridinium crosslinks of collagen enable better discrimination between normal and osteoporotic women than does hydroxyproline. In osteoporosis there appears to be heterogeneity of bone resorption. Finally, an uncoupling index indicated that in osteoporosis bone resorption was increased to a greater extent than bone formation as compared with normal postmenopausal women.