Decalcification Hormonal Vertebral

**Decalcification**

Hormonal **vertebral decalcification (DVD) is a treatment method using destruction of the cortical layer of the vertebrae by exposing them to a remote shock wave (RSW). In addition, during the DECAD process, a 3.7% solution of ethyl glucotonate (EGC) is administered intraosseously.

The term "DVD" from the Latin "decalcification" refers to the process of removing calcium from the body. Most often, the procedure is used to treat various diseases of the musculoskeletal system, for example, in the detection of such pathological conditions as spondylosis and osteochondrosis, in which destructive processes in the intervertebral discs are observed. Although bone tissue is destroyed during this procedure, DVD is considered an alternative surgery in its type.



Decalcification of hormones and growth hormone (DGH), also called hormonal ablation of calcified parathyroid cells or decalcified hormonal vesiculoarchaeoma or DGH, is a benign disease of the parathyroid glands caused by excessive secretion of hyperparathyroidism or pulmonary developmental parathyroidism. This disease is one of the causes of decreased function of the parathyroid glands, which leads to hypocalcemia and rickets in a child. In children with hypocalcemia, deamination of serum cystine-degrading protease is a major cause of heart rhythm, behavioral instability, muscle spasms, and seizures. As a result of increased calcium phosphate levels in the blood, an increased risk of kidney and bone stones may develop. Calcium, along with phosphoric acid, displaces calcium citrates from kidney and urinary stones. Cam