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Journal ArticleDOI

Ovarian Function in Chronic Renal Failure: Evidence Suggesting Hypothalamic Anovulation

TLDR
In uremic women, the continued secretion of estrogen, the rise of plasma levels of luteinizing hormone, FSH, and estradiol after clomiphene, and the elevated gonadotropin levels during menopause suggest that the negativeEstradiol feedback, the tonic gonadotropic secretion, andThe pituitary ovarian axis were normal.
Abstract
The pathogenesis of ovarian dysfunction in uremia was evaluated in 24 patients by measurements of plasma levels of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone, prolactin, estradiol, and progesterone basally and after clomiphene, ethinyl estradiol, and bromocriptine. In the 17 premenopausal women, levels of plasma estradiol, progesterone, and FSH were comparable to those found in normal women during the follicular phase of the ovarian cycle; plasma luteinizing hormone was slightly elevated. In most patients, there was an absence of cyclicity. After clomiphene, plasma levels of luteinizing hormone, FSH, and estradiol rose; after ethinyl estradiol, plasma luteinizing hormone levels failed to increase. In seven postmenopausal patients, plasma estradiol was undetectable and gonadotropin levels were markedly elevated. Although plasma prolactin was generally elevated, suppression of prolactin with bromocriptine resulted in resumption of ovulation in only one patient; the other 2 remained amenorrheic. In uremic women, the continued secretion of estrogen, the rise of plasma levels of luteinizing hormone, FSH, and estradiol after clomiphene, and the elevated gonadotropin levels during menopause suggest that the negative estradiol feedback, the tonic gonadotropin secretion, and the pituitary ovarian axis were normal. The positive estradiol feedback associated with cyclic release of luteinizing hormone, however, was impaired as indicated by the prevalence of acyclicity and the failure of luteinizing hormone levels, to rise after ethinyl estradiol.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A homologous radioimmunoassay for human prolactin.

TL;DR: A sensitive homologous radioimmunoassay for human prolactin (hPRL) is developed and measures concentrations of hPRL as low as 1 ng/ml of human plasma in a group of randomly selected male and female individuals.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Pituitary-Testicular Axis in Men with Chronic Renal Failure

TL;DR: Chronic renal failure interferes with testicular steroid production and spermatogenesis, and the effects of uremia on the pituitary-testicular axis in 35 men with creatinine clearances less than 4 ml per minute per 1.7m was studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gonadal dysfunction in uremic men. A study of the hypothalamo-pituitary-testicular axis before and after renal transplantation.

TL;DR: It is postulated that a defect in that portion of the hypothalamus involved in the receipt and/or interpretation of message might be at fault in uremia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hyperprolactinemia and impaired pituitary response to suppression and stimulation in chronic renal failure: reversal after transplantation.

TL;DR: Plasma PRL secretion was evaluated in 18 patients with chronic renal failure and 8 renal transplant (RT) recipients and was compared with that in 33 controls.
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