What Factors Affect Parathyroid Hormone Levels?
Parathyroid hormone (PTH) is a basic single-chain polypeptide hormone secreted by parathyroid main cells. Its main function is to regulate the metabolism of calcium and phosphorus in vertebrates, which promotes the increase of blood calcium levels and the decrease of blood phosphorus levels. PTH promotes the increase of plasma calcium ion concentration, and its main target organs are bone and kidney. It mobilizes bone calcium into the blood, promotes the reabsorption of calcium ions and excretion of phosphate by the renal tubules, increases the blood calcium concentration and decreases the phosphorus concentration. In addition, PTH also indirectly promotes intestinal absorption of calcium ions. The secretion of PTH is mainly regulated by the plasma calcium ion concentration. The increase of plasma calcium ion concentration will inhibit the secretion of PTH; the decrease of plasma calcium ion concentration will stimulate the secretion of PTH. The detection methods of PTH include chemiluminescence immunoassay, radioimmunoassay and enzyme-linked immunoassay.
- Chinese name
- Parathyroid hormone
- English name
- parathyroid hormone
- nickname
- Xenacase
- Chemical formula
- C22H22F3N
- Molecular weight
- 8771.26
- CAS Registry Number
- 226256-56-0
- Short name
- PTH
- Make up
- Consists of 84 amino acids
Basic Information
Clinical significance of parathyroid hormone
- PTH measurement can help judge parathyroid function.
- 1. Elevation: Plasma PTH is significantly higher than normal, and an increase in serum calcium concentration cannot inhibit the secretion of parathyroid hormone, which may be primary hyperparathyroidism; ectopic hyperparathyroidism Disease: hormones may be secreted by ectopic tumors other than parathyroid glands. Such as renal cancer and bronchial cancer PTH increased, but it is not affected by blood calcium concentration; plasma PTH levels are normal or slightly higher, if patients with both low calcium and high blood phosphorus, can be considered as pseudoparathyroid Hypofunction; third stage hyperparathyroidism: after long-term secondary hyperparathyroidism, autonomous hyperparathyroidism may occur.
- 2. Decrease: idiopathic hypoparathyroidism, hypomagnesemia hypoparathyroidism, hypocalcemia due to reduced PTH secretion; nonhyperthyroid hypercalcemia such as malignant tumors , Sarcoidosis, vitamin D poisoning, hyperthyroidism, and others inhibit PTH secretion due to hypercalcemia.
Reference range of normal parathyroid hormone
- <70pg / ml