NO RM its not sensipar , it does not lower the PTH , it does the actual job of surgery without the surgery. This is why its so rarely used and is so expensive ! Im sorry but we talked about so much i could not even begin to name it but i AM sure of what it does because i was told , there is a big risk because at the same time as it does its job , it strips your body of calcium, so massive doses of calcium have to be pumped into your body. Leave it with me and i will find out what it is called !
Hey KS did she say why the binders don't work when taking prilasec? I take nexium which is about the same and my binders work fine.Troy
"binders" are not taken to lower PTH, binders, as the name suggests, bind with Phosphates and that's the main use. Because so much of our food has phosphorous in it, and we need food, protein etc to survive, the binders are required. Of course this is related to PTH in terms of the Calcium-Phosphorous-Potassium "Triangle" and effect on PTH.Cinacalet, aka Sensipar, is a reasonably new drug that helps to lower serium Calcium and PTH levels. According to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinacalcet it's also marketed as Mimpara in Europe - KS could that be the name they gave you?
I just started Renagel.. and it's being replaced?? Man, Canada must really be behind the times... or it could just be my "have not" province..
Epoman had two broken hips that would never heal from runaway pth. Epofriend had a broken leg that didn't show any significant signs of healing until after his parathyroidectomy some 6 months later. High pth can be crippling yet I don't see high emphasis being placed on it by the medical community.