Onset and characteristics of the midcycle surge in bioactive and immunoactive luteinizing hormone secretion in normal women: influence of physiological variations in periovulatory ovarian steroid hormone secretion
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Date
Authors
Dahl, Kristine D.
Cohen, Nancy L.
Soules, Michael R.
Bremner, William J.
Fritz, Marc A.
McLachlan, Robert I.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Endocrine Society
Abstract
Limited studies in nonhuman primates suggest that the midcycle LH surge is
characterized by distinctly different patterns of bioactive (LH-BIO) and
immunoactive (LH-RIA) LH secretion. To further examine the patterns of
midcycle LH-BIO and LH-RIA secretion and explore the influence of
physiological variations in steroid hormone feedback on LH surge
dimensions we studied seven normal ovulatory women over the periovulatory
interval. In each, blood samples were obtained every 3 h and transvaginal
ultrasonography was performed every 12 h over a 5-7 day interval at
midcycle. Serum levels of LH-RIA, FSH, estradiol (E2), progesterone (P4),
and 17-hydroxyprogesterone were determined by RIA; LH-BIO was estimated
using a mouse leydig cell bioassay. Hormone data were standardized to the
time of surge onset in LH-RIA (time zero), defined as a 100% increase
above a 6-point running mean baseline value; surge cessation was defined
as a decline to below baseline concentration. Mean LH-RIA surge duration
was 54.0 +/- 4.0 h. LH-BIO surge onset was simultaneous with that of
LH-RIA and coincident with the peak in E2 levels (mean data). Mean P4 and
17-hydroxyprogesterone rose in a parallel, phasic manner, an abrupt
increase in slope occurred between -6 h and +30 h but an acute rise in P4
was not consistently observed among individuals. The surge onset to
follicle rupture interval (mean 37.6 +/- 4.2 h) positively correlated with
peak LH-RIA (r = 0.76, P less than 0.05), surge amplitude (r = 0.74, P
less than 0.05) and surge onset to peak interval (r = 0.87, P less than
0.02), but not surge duration. There were no significant relationships
between E2 or P4 (mean, peak, integrated, slope) and surge amplitude or
duration (LH-RIA, FSH), peak value, or surge onset to peak interval
(LH-RIA, LH-BIO, FSH). These data suggest that in women, 1) onset of the
midcycle surge in LH-RIA and LH-BIO is simultaneous, and 2) surge
characteristics are not influenced by physiological variations in steroid
hormone secretion that occur beyond the thresholds required for surge
initiation.
Description
Citation
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1992 Aug;75(2):489-93
