The Influence of Severe Illness on Gonadotropin Secretion in the Postmenopausal Female
- 1 July 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Endocrine Society in Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
- Vol. 45 (1) , 99-104
- https://doi.org/10.1210/jcem-45-1-99
Abstract
Severe weight loss in amenorrheic premenopausal women may significantly depress gonadotropin secretion. Gonadotropin levels were studied in 111 postmenopausal women to determine if weight loss and cachexia could similarly affect gonadotropin function. Thirty-three healthy ambulatory postmenopausal women and twenty-seven healthy hospitalized women admitted electively were foundto have a wide range of elevated values, whose mean did not differ significantly. Mean levels for both LH and FSH were significantly suppressed (P <.005) in severely ill postmenopausal women both with or without weight loss. Mean ±SEM ng/ml LER 907 Healthy ambulatory Hospitalized electively Severely ill 538 ±79 462 ±87 188 ±30 1,778 ±125 1,583 ±67 751 ±418 Severely ill with weight loss 180 ±9 746 ±52 Recovery from illness in six patients wasassociated with a rapid rise in FSH levels while LH remained depressed. Two severely ill patients studied over a 6 h period revealed constant depression of both gonadotropins without the characteristic pulses seen in four normal control postmenopausal women. These results indicate that gonadotropin secretion may be suppressed in severely ill postmenopausal women whether weight loss is present or not, and the central nervous regulatory mechanism responsible for intermittant release of gonadotropins is impaired. The disparate FSH and LH recovery indicates that ifseparate gonadotrophs exist, the LH gonadotroph is more severely affected than the FSH gonadotrophand/or that the responsible regulatory mechanisms are different.Keywords
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