Chronic human chorionic gonadotropin administration in normal men: evidence that follicle-stimulating hormone is necessary for the maintenance of quantitatively normal spermatogenesis in man
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Bremner, William J.
Matsumoto, Alvin M.
Karpas, Anthony E.
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Endocrine Society
Abstract
The role of FSH in the maintenance of spermatogenesis in man is poorly
understood. To determine whether normal serum levels of FSH are necessary
for the maintenance of quantitatively normal spermatogenesis, we first
studied the effect on sperm production of selective FSH deficiency induced
by chronic administration of hCG in normal men. Then, we determined the
effect of FSH replacement in some of these men. After a 3-month control
period, eight normal men (aged 30-39 yr) received 5000 IU hCG, im, twice
weekly for 7 months. Then while continuing the same dosage of hCG,
subjects simultaneously received 200 mg testosterone enanthate (T), im,
weekly for an additional 6 months. hCG administration alone resulted in
partial suppression of the mean sperm concentration from 88 +/- 24
(+/-SEM) million/ml during the control period to 22 +/- 7 million/ml
during the last 4 months of hCG treatment (P less than 0.001 compared to
control values). With the addition of T to hCG, sperm counts remained
suppressed to the same degree. Except for one man who became azoospermic
while receiving hCG plus T, sperm motilities and morphologies remained
normal in all subjects throughout the entire study. During both the hCG
alone and hCG plus T periods, serum FSH levels were undetectable (less
than 25 ng/ml), and urinary FSH levels were comparable to those in
prepubertal children and hypogonadotropic hypogonadal adults. We replaced
FSH activity in four of the eight men in whom prolonged selective FSH
deficiency and partial suppression of sperm production were induced by hCG
administration. Immediately after the period of hCG plus T administration,
T was stopped in four men who continued to receive hCG alone (5000 IU, im,
twice weekly) for 3 months. Then, while continuing the same dosage of hCG,
these men received 100 IU human FSH, sc, daily (n = 2) or 75 IU human
menopausal gonadotropin, sc, daily (n = 2) for 5-8 months. During the
second period of hCG administration alone, serum FSH levels were
undetectable (less than 25 ng/ml), and sperm concentrations were
suppressed (34 +/- 13 million/ml) compared to the control values for these
four men (125 +/- 39 million/ml; P less than 0.001). With the addition of
FSH to hCG, FSH levels increased (213 +/- 72 ng/ml) and sperm
concentrations rose significantly, reaching a mean of 103 +/- 30
million/ml (P less than 0.03 compared to hCG alone).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT
400 WORDS)
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Citation
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1986 Jun;62(6):1184-92
