BONE DENSITOMETRY VERSUS URINARY DEOXYPYRIDINOLINE AS MARKERS OF BONE RESORPTION IN EPILEPTIC CHILDREN

Hoda L. El Sayed, Omar Hussein*, Wael El Garf**

Pediatric and *Diagnostic Radiology Departments, Faculty of Medicine - Ain Shams University, **National Research Centre, Cairo, Egypt

 

Objective: to assess the resorptive bone status by BMD versus urinary/free deoxpyridinoline (u/f-DPD) in epileptic children receiving valproate (VPA) and/or carbamazepine (CBZ) either as mono-or polytherapy.

Methods: Forty seven 1ry epileptic patients on long term anticonvulsants were subjects of this study. They were divided into three groups; Group I : monotherapy VPA treated patients (n=27), Group II: monotherapy CBZ treated patients (n=8) and Group III: polytherapy treated patients, VPA + CBZ (n=12). Twenty healthy subjects served as controls and formed Group IV. Patients and controls were subjected to history taking, clinical examination, lumbar spine osteodensitometry and laboratory investigations: serum Calcium (Ca), phosphorus (P), total alkaline phosphatase, 25(OH) cholecalciferol and u/f-DBD.  Serum trough levels of the drugs, brain CT scan and EEG were done for all patients.

Results: Showed significant reduction in weight and height percentiles, serum Ca, P and 25(OH)D3 in epileptic patients compared to controls. Total serum alkaline phosphatase was significantly higher in epileptics compared to controls. Spinal osteodensitometry showed significant bone resorption in epileptics whereas u/f-DPD did not show any significant detective value.

Conclusion: long-term anticonvulsant therapy leads to bone resorption and that imaging is better than u/f-DPD as a chemical marker in the detection of bone resorption of growing children. Hence vitamin D or calcitriol administration is recommended in epileptics on long-term anticonvulsants.

 
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