Bone-specific alkaline phosphatase – a potential biomarker for skeletal growth assessment
Journal of Orthodontics 45(1): 4-10
Article 2017 English
Authors
TT
Tulika Tripathi
PG
Prateek Gupta
JS
Jitender Sharma
Abstract
1 min read
The present study was aimed to assess levels of serum Bone-specific alkaline phosphatase (BALP) and serum Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) and comparing with cervical vertebral maturation index (CVMI) stages.Cross-sectional study.Maulana Azad Institute of Dental Sciences, New Delhi, India.150 subjects (75 males and 75 females) in the age group of 8-20 years.Subjects were divided into six CVMI stages. Enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay was performed for the estimation of serum BALP and serum IGF-1 levels. Mann-Whitney U test was performed to compare mean ranks of serum BALP and serum IGF-1 with different CVMI stages. Spearman correlation between serum BALP and serum IGF-1 was done across 6 CVMI stages.Peak serum IGF-1 levels were found at CVMI stages 4 and 3 for males and females respectively. Peak levels for serum BALP were found at stage 3 for both genders with significant differences from other stages. A statistically significant correlation was seen between serum IGF-1 and serum BALP from CVMI stages 1 to 3 and 4 to 6 (p < .01).BALP showed promising results and can be employed as a potential biomarker for the estimation of growth status.
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