Variability of serum prolactin and progesterone levels in normal women: the relevance of single hormone measurements in the clinical setting
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Cohen, Nancy L.
Soules, Michael R.
Fujimoto, Victor Y.
Clifton, Donald K.
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Elsevier
Abstract
In order to delineate factors contributing to variation in hormone levels,
progesterone and prolactin (PRL) levels from 28 normal women, obtained
daily during one menstrual cycle and every 20 minutes during a midluteal
24-hour admission in a subgroup of five subjects, provided a data base for
analysis of these variables. Pulsatile analysis of the 24-hour data was
conducted using an adaptive-threshold algorithm, and normal reference
ranges were generated from randomly selected daily hormone values. Our
data verify that inherent variation can significantly alter single random
serum levels of reproductive hormones. These variations included menstrual
cycle day, circadian influence, pulsatile secretion, assay error, and
biologic heterogeneity. Besides the expected day-to-day change in
progesterone levels during the luteal phase, seven of ten women exhibited
a significant circadian variation in progesterone; however, the time of
day of the peak level was not consistent among women. Prolactin levels did
not demonstrate any clinically relevant change over the menstrual cycle,
but did have a consistent circadian pattern (nocturnal rise) over the
24-hour study period. Pulsatile variation occurred in both progesterone
and PRL levels during the 24-hour admission. Five different reference
ranges were generated from randomly selected single daily values from the
28 normal menstrual cycles. Although the mean levels calculated for each
reference range were similar, the reference ranges demonstrated
considerable variation due to the random sampling. In the five
progesterone reference ranges, the lower limit of the range varied from
2.7-6.1 ng/mL, whereas the upper limit varied from 24.2-42.1
ng/mL.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Obstet Gynecol. 1990 Jul;76(1):71-8
