ULTRADIAN AND CIRCADIAN PATTERNS IN LUTEINIZING-HORMONE SECRETION DURING REPRODUCTIVE LIFE IN WOMEN

Authors
Citation
Wg. Rossmanith, ULTRADIAN AND CIRCADIAN PATTERNS IN LUTEINIZING-HORMONE SECRETION DURING REPRODUCTIVE LIFE IN WOMEN, Human reproduction, 8, 1993, pp. 77-83
Citations number
58
Categorie Soggetti
Reproductive Biology
Journal title
ISSN journal
02681161
Volume
8
Year of publication
1993
Supplement
2
Pages
77 - 83
Database
ISI
SICI code
0268-1161(1993)8:<77:UACPIL>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
Based on the findings of close links between intermittent hypothalamic releasing hormone stimulation and hypophyseal gonadotrophin response, an assessment of the pulsatility of serum gonadotrophins may represen t a feasible way to indirectly evaluate central regulatory processes i n humans. Since ovarian steroid feedback is virtually absent in hypogo nadal women, their luteinizing hormone (LH) pulsatility may represent the unrestrained LH pulse rhythm at its maximal rate. Relative changes in the LH pulse characteristics during the menstrual cycle could then be referred to this basic pulsatility. Hence, LH pulse frequencies in crease during cycle periods of high sex steroid exposure, but this inc rease is limited to the LH periodicities found in hypogonadal women. F urthermore, LH pulse amplitudes are successively enhanced from the fol licular to the luteal phase of the cycle yet they never exceed those f ound in hypogonadal subjects. In addition, circadian excursions subser ve pulsatile LH secretion during all periods of the menstrual cycle, a lthough the character of these circadian rhythmicities differs from th at observed in the LH secretory profiles of hypogonadal women. Thus, a lbeit profoundly modulated by ovarian sex steroid feedback during the menstrual cycle, LH pulsatility and its circadian variations in women during the menstrual cycle is confined to the ultradian and circadian LH secretory patterns of the hypogonadal state.