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2.
J Am Board Fam Med ; 26(1): 35-44, 2013.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23288279

INTRODUCTION: The postpartum period is a challenging time for family planning, especially for women who breastfeed. Breastfeeding delays the return of menses (lactational amenorrhea), but ovulation often occurs before first menses. For this reason, a protocol was developed to assist women in identifying their return of fertility postpartum to avoid pregnancy. METHODS: In this prospective, 12-month, longitudinal cohort study, 198 postpartum women aged 20 to 45 years (mean age, 30.2 years) were taught a protocol for avoiding pregnancy with either online or in-person instruction. A hand-held fertility monitor was used to identify the fertile period by testing for urinary changes in estrogen and luteinizing hormone, and the results were tracked on a web site. During lactational amenorrhea, urine testing was done in 20-day intervals. When menses returned, the monitor was reset at the onset of each new menstrual cycle. Participants were instructed to avoid intercourse during the identified fertile period. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was used to calculate unintentional pregnancy rates through the first 12 months postpartum. RESULTS: There were 8 unintended pregnancies per 100 women at 12 months postpartum. With correct use, there were 2 unintended pregnancies per 100 women at 12 months. CONCLUSION: The online postpartum protocol may effectively assist a select group of women in avoiding pregnancy during the transition to regular menstrual cycles.


Amenorrhea/urine , Fertile Period/urine , Natural Family Planning Methods/methods , Ovulation Detection/methods , Postpartum Period/urine , Adult , Breast Feeding , Clinical Protocols , Estrogens/urine , Female , Humans , Internet , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Longitudinal Studies , Luteinizing Hormone/urine , Middle Aged , Natural Family Planning Methods/instrumentation , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care , Ovulation Detection/instrumentation , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Pregnancy , Pregnancy, Unplanned , Prospective Studies
3.
Bone ; 49(2): 194-201, 2011 Aug.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21549231

BACKGROUND: In women with anorexia nervosa, elevated fasting peptide YY (PYY) is associated with decreased bone mineral density (BMD). Prior research from our lab has demonstrated that fasting total PYY concentrations are elevated in exercising women with amenorrhea compared to ovulatory exercising women. PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to assess the association between fasting total PYY, average monthly estrogen exposure and BMD in non-obese premenopausal exercising women. METHODS: Daily urine samples were collected and assessed for metabolites of estrone 1-glucuronide (E1G) and pregnandiol glucuronide (PdG) for at least one menstrual cycle if ovulatory or a 28-day monitoring period if amenorrheic. Fasting serum samples were pooled over the measurement period and analyzed for total PYY and leptin. BMD and body composition were assessed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. Multiple regression analyses were performed to determine whether measures of body composition, estrogen status, exercise minutes, leptin and PYY explained a significant amount of the variance in BMD at multiple sites. RESULTS: Premenopausal exercising women aged 23.8±0.9years with a mean BMI of 21.2±0.4kg/m(2) exercised 346±48min/week and had a peak oxygen uptake of 49.1±1.8mL/kg/min. Thirty-nine percent (17/44) of the women had amenorrhea. Fasting total PYY concentrations were negatively associated with total body BMD (p=0.033) and total hip BMD (p=0.043). Mean E1G concentrations were positively associated with total body BMD (p=0.033) and lumbar spine (L2-L4) BMD (p=0.047). The proportion of variance in lumbar spine (L2-L4) BMD explained by body weight and E1G cycle mean was 16.4% (R(2)=0.204, p=0.012). The proportion of variance in hip BMD explained by PYY cycle mean was 8.6% (R(2)=0.109, p=0.033). The proportion of variance in total body BMD explained by body weight and E1G cycle mean was 21.9% (R(2)=0.257, p=0.003). CONCLUSION: PYY, mean E1G and body weight are associated with BMD in premenopausal exercising women. Thus, elevated PYY and suppressed estrogen concentrations are associated with, and could be directly contributing to, low BMD in exercising women with amenorrhea, despite regular physical activity.


Bone Density/physiology , Estrogens/blood , Exercise/physiology , Peptide YY/blood , Absorptiometry, Photon , Adolescent , Adult , Amenorrhea/blood , Amenorrhea/urine , Estrone/urine , Fasting/blood , Female , Humans , Leptin/blood , Pregnanediol/analogs & derivatives , Pregnanediol/urine , Premenopause/blood , Premenopause/urine , Young Adult
4.
Hum Reprod ; 26(3): 685-94, 2011 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21227945

BACKGROUND: Low concentrations of leptin secondary to low body fat or other modulators are thought to be a key signal whereby an energy deficit suppresses the reproductive axis in exercising women resulting in functional hypothalamic amenorrhea (FHA). The purpose of this study was to first examine leptin concentrations in exercising women with and without FHA to address whether there is a threshold concentration of leptin below which reproductive function is suppressed. Secondly, we examined the role of adiposity and other possible modulators of leptin to ascertain whether leptin regulation differs depending on reproductive status. METHODS: This study assessed 50 exercising, premenopausal women (aged 18-30 years) over the course of one menstrual cycle (eumenorrheic women) or one 28-day monitoring period (amenorrheic women). Quantification of daily urinary ovarian steroids and menstrual history were used to determine menstrual status. Body composition was assessed using dual energy X-ray absorptiometry, and leptin was determined by enzyme-linked immunoassay. Key modulators of leptin such as serum insulin concentration, carbohydrate intake, glucose availability, indirect indices of sympathetic nervous activity and other factors were assessed using linear regression. RESULTS: Percentage body fat (%BF) (21.0 ± 1.0 versus 26.8 ± 0.7%; P < 0.001) and leptin concentration (4.8 ± 0.8 versus 9.6 ± 0.9 ng/ml; P < 0.001) were lower in the exercising women with amenorrhea (ExAmen; n = 24) compared with the exercising ovulatory women (ExOvul; n = 26). However, the ranges in leptin were similar for each group (ExAmen: 0.30-16.98 ng/ml; ExOvul: 2.57-18.28 ng/ml), and after adjusting for adiposity the difference in leptin concentration was no longer significant. Significant predictors of log leptin in ExAmen included %BF (ß = 0.826, P < 0.001), log insulin (ß = 0.308, P = 0.012) and log glycerol (ß = 0.258, P = 0.030), but in ExOvul only %BF predicted leptin. CONCLUSIONS These data suggest that leptin concentrations per se are not associated with FHA in exercising women, but the modulation of leptin concentrations may differ depending on reproductive status.


Amenorrhea/blood , Exercise , Leptin/blood , Menstrual Cycle/blood , Absorptiometry, Photon , Adiposity , Adolescent , Adult , Amenorrhea/epidemiology , Amenorrhea/urine , Blood Glucose/analysis , Cross-Sectional Studies , Dietary Carbohydrates/administration & dosage , Estrone/analogs & derivatives , Estrone/urine , Exercise/physiology , Female , Glucuronides/urine , Glycerol/blood , Humans , Insulin/blood , Luteinizing Hormone/blood , Luteinizing Hormone/urine , Menstrual Cycle/urine , Pregnanediol/analogs & derivatives , Pregnanediol/urine , Young Adult
5.
Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab ; 292(5): E1401-9, 2007 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17227959

The cardiovascular consequences of hypoestrogenism in premenopausal women are unclear. Accordingly, the influence of menstrual status and endogenous estrogen (E(2)) exposure on blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR), and calf blood flow in young (18-35 yr) regularly exercising premenopausal women with exercise-associated menstrual aberrations was investigated. Across consecutive menstrual cycles, daily urinary ovarian steroid levels were analyzed, and the area under the curve was calculated to determine menstrual status and E(2) exposure. BP, HR, blood flow, vascular conductance, and resistance were measured at baseline and following ischemic calf exercise. Exercising subjects consisted of 14 ovulatory (ExOv), 10 short-term (anovulatory and 100 days amenorrhea; LT-E(2) Def) E(2)-deficient women. Nine sedentary ovulatory subjects (SedOv) were also studied. All groups were similar in age (24.8 +/- 0.7 yr), height (164.8 +/- 1.3 cm), weight (57.9 +/- 0.9 kg), and body mass index (21.3 +/- 0.3 kg/m(2)). E(2)-deficient groups had lower (P < 0.002) E(2) exposure compared with ovulatory groups. Resting systolic BP, HR, blood flow, and vascular conductance were lower (P < 0.05) and vascular resistance higher (P < 0.05) in LT-E(2) Def compared with both ovulatory groups. Peak ischemic blood flow, vascular conductance, and HR were also lower (P < 0.05) and vascular resistance higher (P < 0.05) in LT-E(2) Def compared with all other groups. Our findings show that exercising women with long-term E(2) deficiency have impaired regional blood flow and lower systolic BP and HR compared with exercising and sedentary ovulatory women. These cardiovascular alterations represent markers of altered vascular function and autonomic regulation of which the long-term effects remain unknown.


Amenorrhea/physiopathology , Blood Pressure/physiology , Estrogens/deficiency , Exercise/physiology , Menstrual Cycle/physiology , Adult , Amenorrhea/urine , Estrogens/physiology , Estrone/analogs & derivatives , Estrone/urine , Female , Heart Rate/physiology , Humans , Luteinizing Hormone/urine , Pregnanediol/analogs & derivatives , Pregnanediol/urine , Premenopause/physiology , Premenopause/urine , Regional Blood Flow/physiology
6.
Am J Phys Anthropol ; 129(4): 609-19, 2006 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16345064

Previous studies of postpartum amenorrhea (PPA) demonstrated distinct subgroups of women with short and long durations of amenorrhea. This phenomenon was attributed to cases where breastfeeding is absent because of pregnancy loss or infant death, or confusion of postpartum bleeding with resumption of menses. We explored these ideas using data from an 11-month prospective study in Bangladesh in which 858 women provided twice-weekly interviews and urine specimens for up to 9 months; 300 women were observed while experiencing PPA. The resulting exact, interval-censored, or right-censored durations were used to estimate parameters of two-component mixture models. A mixture of two Weibull distributions provided the best fit to the observations. The long-duration subgroup made up 84% (+/- 4% SE) of the population, with a mean duration of 457 (+/- 31) days. The short-duration subgroup had a mean duration of 94 (+/- 17) days. Three covariates were associated with the duration of PPA: women whose husbands had high-wage employment had a greater probability of falling in the short-duration subgroup; women in the long-duration subgroup whose husbands seasonally migrated had shorter periods of PPA within the subgroup; and mothers in the short-duration subgroup who gave birth during the monsoon season experienced a shortened duration of PPA within the subgroup. We conclude that the bimodal distribution of PPA reflects biological or behavioral heterogeneity rather than shortcomings of data collection.


Amenorrhea/epidemiology , Postpartum Period/physiology , Rural Population/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult , Amenorrhea/urine , Bangladesh/epidemiology , Estrone/analogs & derivatives , Estrone/urine , Female , Humans , Likelihood Functions , Middle Aged , Postpartum Period/urine , Pregnanediol/analogs & derivatives , Pregnanediol/urine , Prospective Studies , Statistical Distributions
7.
Gynecol Oncol ; 85(2): 315-20, 2002 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11972394

OBJECTIVE: The finding of persistent low-level human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) with or without a preceding pregnancy event presents a rare but clinically important challenge and a therapeutic dilemma. These are patients with "real" hCG shown by the positive test in both serum and urine or by specialized testing. The problems associated with "phantom" hCG have been recognized and should now be clinically resolvable. Four cases of low-level "real" hCG are described to illustrate the problems encountered, the management, and the resolution achieved. METHODS: Two patients presented with persistent low-level hCG after hydatidiform mole pregnancy, one after an early pregnancy loss and one as amenorrhea and irregular bleeding. A detailed clinical description is provided to illustrate the difficulties encountered. RESULTS: All patients have real hCG. The hCG level of Patient 1 was responsive to hormonal contraception and disappeared with such medication. Over a period of 3 years hCG reappeared whenever estrogen was stopped. Patient 2 achieved two pregnancies and the hCG subsequently disappeared. The hCG in Patient 3 persisted over a period of 6 years although she is now menopausal. Patient 4 developed metastatic placental site trophoblastic tumor after 2 1/2 years of observation of low-level hCG. CONCLUSIONS: The finding of unexplainable low-level hCG in a patient without evidence of a uterine lesion or of trophoblastic metastases provides a therapeutic challenge. The administration of single-agent chemotherapy had no effect on the level of hCG in the three patients to whom it was administered. The administration of multiple-agent chemotherapy appears unjustified in the absence of a demonstrable trophoblastic tumor. A small number of trophoblastic cells must be providing this hCG and these cells may be quiescent for years. Nevertheless these cells may proliferate and manifest themselves as trophoblastic tumor. Continuing long-term surveillance of these patients is necessary.


Chorionic Gonadotropin/blood , Chorionic Gonadotropin/urine , Hydatidiform Mole/blood , Hydatidiform Mole/urine , Adult , Amenorrhea/blood , Amenorrhea/urine , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Pregnancy , Trophoblastic Neoplasms/blood , Trophoblastic Neoplasms/drug therapy , Trophoblastic Neoplasms/urine , Uterine Neoplasms/blood , Uterine Neoplasms/drug therapy , Uterine Neoplasms/urine
8.
Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) ; 48(2): 169-73, 1998 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9579228

OBJECTIVE: Prolonged period of amenorrhoea are regarded as a risk factor for the appearance of osteoporosis. Amenorrhoea is a feature of different pathological conditions with heterogeneous endocrine profiles. We evaluated bone mineral metabolism in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), hypothalamic amenorrhoea and idiopathic hirsutism in order to establish the relative importance for the maintenance of normal bone mass of ovulatory cycles and androgen and oestrogen production. PATIENTS AND MEASUREMENTS: Bone mineral density (BMD), bone turnover markers and endocrine profile were evaluated in 51 patients with PCOS, 24 patients with idiopathic hirsutism, 26 patients with hypothalamic amenorrhoea and 35 healthy women. Body mass index (BMI) ranged between 20.1 and 31.0 kg/m2, and age from 17 to 33 years. Thirty-eight of the PCOS patients were amenorrhoeic (< 4 menstrual cycles/year). RESULTS: Spine and femoral BMD were significantly decreased and bone markers (serum osteocalcin, and urinary excretion of free deoxypyridinoline, cross-linked N-telopeptide and hydroxyproline) significantly increased in the patients with hypothalamic amenorrhoea, when compared to control subjects and the other two patient groups. In the sub-group of PCOS patients with amenorrhoea, spine and femoral neck BMD was significantly lower than in patients with idiopathic hirsutism and the non-amenorrhoeic PCOS patients. In all PCOS patients, spine and neck BMD were positively correlated (P < 0.05) with serum androstenedione and free testosterone levels. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study suggest that in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome the deleterious effect on bone of amenorrhoea is balanced by androgen overproduction.


Amenorrhea/physiopathology , Bone Density , Bone Remodeling , Hirsutism/physiopathology , Polycystic Ovary Syndrome/physiopathology , Adolescent , Adult , Amenorrhea/blood , Amenorrhea/urine , Amino Acids/urine , Analysis of Variance , Biomarkers/blood , Biomarkers/urine , Collagen/urine , Collagen Type I , Female , Hirsutism/blood , Hirsutism/urine , Humans , Hydroxyproline/urine , Osteocalcin/blood , Peptides/urine , Polycystic Ovary Syndrome/blood , Polycystic Ovary Syndrome/urine , Regression Analysis
9.
J Endocrinol ; 140(2): 297-307, 1994 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8169562

A tumour of the left adrenal gland was identified in a woman who presented with virilization and secondary amenorrhea. Preoperatively, the plasma levels of dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate, dehydroepiandrosterone, androstenedione, testosterone, 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone and 5-androstene-3 beta,17 beta-diol were elevated two- to fourfold whereas those of urinary 17-ketosteroids were elevated more than tenfold. The production rate of dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate was more than 16 times that in normal women whereas those of dehydroepiandrosterone, testosterone and androstenedione were approximately twofold greater; plasma testosterone was derived almost entirely from the peripheral conversion of androstenedione. Blood was obtained by catheterization of the ovarian veins, left adrenal gland vein and inferior vena cava (at two different sites) and plasma steroid levels were determined: testosterone and cortisol levels were elevated in all blood samples whereas those of androstenedione, dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate and 11-desoxycortisol were approximately six- to eightfold, 1.5-fold and nine- to 22-fold higher in the effluent on the left adrenal gland/tumour compared with the levels in the other compartments. Blood was collected hourly for 24 h to determine steroid levels under basal conditions and, also, after ACTH treatment. Plasma cortisol levels increased markedly upon ACTH administration and fell to very low levels 11 h later, but those of androstenedione, testosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone, 5-androstene-3 beta,17 beta-diol and dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate were not affected by ACTH treatment. A histological diagnosis of cortical adenoma of the extirpated tumour was made. Tissue explants and adenoma cells were maintained in culture to characterize the steroid-metabolizing properties of the tumour. The secretion of dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate by tissue explants was highly initially, but declined to almost undetectable levels after 5 days in culture. In the presence of ACTH, dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate secretion remained elevated throughout the entire study up to 5 days. Basal secretion of dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate, androstenedione, 11-desoxycortisol, cortisol, testosterone and 11 beta-hydroxyandrostenedione by adenoma cells was either very low or undetectable. In the presence of ACTH, dibutyryl cyclic AMP or cholera toxin the secretion of dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate, androstenedione and 11-desoxycortisol increased markedly with time in culture up to 3 days, whereas the other steroids were undetected in the medium. A homogenate of adenoma tissue metabolized testosterone to androstenedione, but the conversion of androstenedione to testosterone was minimal. The findings of this study served to establish that virilization in this woman was due at least in part, to excess testosterone--and testosterone-derived 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone--produced at extra-adrenal tissue sites almost exclusively through metabolism of tumour-secreted androstenedione.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Adenoma/blood , Adrenal Gland Neoplasms/blood , Amenorrhea/blood , Androgens/blood , Virilism/blood , 17-Ketosteroids/urine , Adenoma/complications , Adenoma/urine , Adrenal Gland Neoplasms/complications , Adrenal Gland Neoplasms/urine , Adult , Amenorrhea/urine , Androstane-3,17-diol/blood , Androstenedione/blood , Dehydroepiandrosterone/analogs & derivatives , Dehydroepiandrosterone/blood , Dehydroepiandrosterone Sulfate , Dihydrotestosterone/blood , Female , Humans , Testosterone/blood , Tumor Cells, Cultured , Virilism/etiology
10.
Anticancer Res ; 12(3): 693-704, 1992.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1622126

Chronological trend of urinary steroid excretions in Japanese women was investigated during the period of June 1972 to August 1986 using healthy women of urban and rural origins, patients with breast cancer and patients with either cervical cancer or endometrial cancer. The excretions of 14 neutral steroids were estimated by gas liquid chromatography, and the obtained data were tentatively correlated with the epidemiological backgrounds. In the course of the chronological transition from the 1st stage (1972-1974) to the 2nd stage (1975-79), the urinary steroid pattern of Japanese women with and without cancer experienced a common change to produce specific deviations that were in agreement with the hormonal characteristics of a pill user or of an endometrial cancer patient. At the 3rd stage (1980-86), patients with either cervical cancer or endometrial cancer were distinguished from 1st stage controls by non-specific depression of all androgens, progestins and corticosteroids in urine. Throughout the whole period, both the risk for cervical cancer and the reproductive activity (birth rate) were found to decrease continuously in Japanese women. Evidence was presented to suggest that the above deterioration of the hormonal environment in Japanese women could be related to the stress of modern life rather than to defects in the diet. On the basis of the above findings, the 1st, 2nd and 3rd stages of our investigation were tentatively termed the pro-cervical cancer age, the pro-endometrial cancer age and the pro-hypogonadism age. The relation between the chronological change of urinary steroids and that of the epidemiological background was analyzed from the view point of population ecology.


Biomarkers, Tumor/urine , Endometrial Neoplasms/urine , Steroids/urine , Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/urine , White People , Age Factors , Amenorrhea/urine , Anovulation/urine , Breast Neoplasms/urine , Contraceptives, Oral , Demography , Endometrial Neoplasms/epidemiology , Endometrial Neoplasms/pathology , Female , Humans , Japan/epidemiology , Kidney Neoplasms/urine , Multivariate Analysis , Neoplasm Staging , Ovulation , Reference Values , Regression Analysis , Risk Factors , Rural Population , Steroids/metabolism , Urban Population , Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/epidemiology , Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/pathology
11.
N Z Med J ; 102(881): 629-30, 1989 Dec 13.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2608225

The present study was undertaken to compare fasting urinary calcium/creatinine (Ca/Cr) and hydroxyproline/creatinine (HP/Cr) values in young amenorrhoeic women with those of age and weight-matched menstruating women and to see whether restoration of menstruation would influence values. Thirty amenorrhoeic patients were matched with 30 controls. Higher Ca/Cr (0.393 (SD 0.213) vs 0.142 (0.89), p less than 0.001) and HP/Cr (0.025 (0.005) vs 0.020 (0.007), p less than 0.005) values were found in patients with hyperprolactinaemia or hypothalamic dysfunction associated with weight loss, anorexia nervosa or excessive exercise (n = 20), suggesting excessive bone loss in these amenorrhoeic patients, who are frequently oestrogen deficient. Furthermore when 9 amenorrhoeic patients with hypothalamic dysfunction became eumenorrhoeic their urinary Ca/Cr values fell (p less than 0.02). However, amenorrhoeic patients with polycystic ovaries (n = 10) had similar Ca/Cr and HP/Cr values as their controls. It is therefore probable that amenorrhoeic patients with polycystic ovaries are not at risk of osteopenia. The present findings suggest measurements of fasting urinary Ca/Cr and HP/Cr values are likely to prove useful in identifying patients with amenorrhoea who are rapidly losing bone, and in assessing their responses to therapy.


Amenorrhea/urine , Calcium/urine , Creatinine/urine , Fasting/urine , Hydroxyproline/urine , Adult , Amenorrhea/etiology , Female , Humans , Hyperprolactinemia/complications , Hypothalamic Diseases/complications , Pituitary Diseases/complications , Polycystic Ovary Syndrome/complications
13.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab ; 64(3): 486-93, 1987 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3102537

A sensitive and specific in vitro granulosa cell aromatase bioassay was adapted to measure bioactive FSH (bio-FSH) levels in urine samples. Urinary levels of bio-FSH, immunoreactive LH, estrone conjugates, and pregnanediol-3-glucuronide (PdG) were measured in first morning urine samples during the menstrual cycle in six cycling women and four lowland gorillas. The cycle length of women was relatively constant [28 +/- 1 (+/- SD) days], but varied from 28-38 days for lowland gorillas; the length of the luteal phases was relatively constant for both. All subjects had a midcycle LH peak and a luteal phase elevation in PdG. In addition, urinary estrogen excretion displayed a midcycle elevation that preceded the LH peak and a luteal phase increase similar to that of PdG. The bio-FSH levels in urine of cycling women, although at almost 100-fold higher concentrations, exhibited a pattern that closely resembled that of serum bio-FSH levels reported earlier, with an early follicular phase rise and a midcycle peak. Statistical analysis indicated a highly significant correlation (r = 0.90) between serum and urinary bio-FSH levels during the human menstrual cycle and in women in several hypo- and hypergonadotropic states, including oral contraceptive pill users, hypothalamic amenorrhea, premature ovarian failure, and postmenopause. Although a midcycle bio-FSH surge was also detected in lowland gorillas, two peaks of bio-FSH levels were consistently found during the follicular phase. The late follicular phase increase in bio-FSH levels was presumably involved in follicle selection and preceded the midcycle FSH peak by about 6 days, whereas the timing of the early follicular phase peak was variable, suggesting the involvement of complex regulatory mechanisms. These findings suggest that measurement of urinary bio-FSH levels in humans reflects serum bio-FSH in subjects in several physiological and pathological states. Studies of urinary bio-FSH levels in humans and nonhuman primates are useful in monitoring menstrual cycles, and the gorillas may be a model for understanding human reproductive cycles. The urinary granulosa cell aromatase bioassay should be useful for future assessment of bio-FSH levels in situations where serum measurements are impractical or in animal species for which specific FSH RIAs are not available.


Estrone/urine , Follicle Stimulating Hormone/urine , Gorilla gorilla/physiology , Luteinizing Hormone/urine , Menstrual Cycle , Pregnanediol/analogs & derivatives , Amenorrhea/urine , Animals , Contraceptives, Oral/pharmacology , Estrone/analogs & derivatives , Female , Humans , Menopause , Pregnanediol/urine , Species Specificity
14.
Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) ; 24(3): 243-52, 1986 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3085998

Four fully breast-feeding women at 6 weeks post partum were injected with LHRH (0.1 microgram/kg) every 94 min by pulsatile infusion pump. While follicular development occurred in all women, and evidence of luteinization was apparent in three out of four, normal ovulation and luteal function did not occur. This suggests that a simple disturbance in the pulsatile pattern of LHRH secretion may not, in itself, be enough to explain the suppression of ovarian activity during lactation.


Amenorrhea/physiopathology , Breast Feeding , Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone/administration & dosage , Ovary/physiology , Adult , Amenorrhea/urine , Creatinine/urine , Estrogens/urine , Female , Follicle Stimulating Hormone/metabolism , Humans , Infusions, Parenteral , Luteinizing Hormone/metabolism , Ovarian Follicle/drug effects , Pregnancy , Pregnanediol/urine , Prolactin/metabolism
15.
JAMA ; 250(23): 3202-4, 1983 Dec 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6417361

Twenty-six daughters born to amenorrheic women after gonadotropin-induced ovulation were studied at 10 to 16 years of age. The aim of the study was to assess whether the mothers' condition, namely, amenorrhea and infertility followed by the pharmacologic induction of ovulation, had any effect on their female offspring in terms of endocrine disorders at puberty. The daughters were found to have normal onset of puberty as well as normal physical and mental development. The mean age at menarche, body weight, and height were similar to those of the general female population in Israel. A functioning hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis was evidenced by the appearance of menarche followed by regular cycles. These data form a reassuring sample for the clinicians, the treated mothers, and their offspring.


Amenorrhea/complications , Chorionic Gonadotropin/therapeutic use , Infertility, Female/drug therapy , Menarche/drug effects , Menotropins/therapeutic use , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects , Puberty/drug effects , 17-Hydroxycorticosteroids/urine , 17-Ketosteroids/urine , Adolescent , Amenorrhea/urine , Child , Female , Humans , Infertility, Female/complications , Ovulation Induction , Pregnancy
18.
Bull Assoc Anat (Nancy) ; 63(182): 297-308, 1979 Sep.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-399862

In the urinary sediment, the cellular material mainly originates from cells of the bladdertrigone. These cells are submitted to hormonal stimulation and their study constitutes the base of a cytological method called "urocytogram". The urinary sediment was examined in thirty-five young girls with backward puberty. The repeated examinations contribute to differential diagnosis and help in etiologic diagnosis. Whenever it is necessary to investigate adolescent's sex hormones, an urocytogram, a simple and painless method, is indicated.


Amenorrhea/urine , Urine/cytology , Adolescent , Adult , Amenorrhea/etiology , Amenorrhea/physiopathology , Cytological Techniques , Epithelial Cells , Estrogens/physiology , Female , Humans , Pituitary Gland, Anterior/physiopathology , Puberty, Delayed/urine , Turner Syndrome/complications
19.
Br J Obstet Gynaecol ; 86(1): 64-8, 1979 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-760769

Clomiphene was administered to 16 patients with elevated serum prolactin levels in doses of 100, 200 and 300 mg/day for five days in succeeding months and total urinary oestrogens estimated on days 0, 5, 8, 12 and 15 following commencement of treatment. The responses were compared with six patients who were amenorrhoeic but had normal serum prolactin levels and absent positive feedback to oestrogen. The increased outputs of oestrogens were similar in the two groups. In the hyperprolactinaemic group 5 out of 16 subjects showed evidence of ovulation whilst the remainder showed a secondary failure of response. Six subjects who failed to ovulate were treated with clomiphene and human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) and ovulations were induced in 31 out of 34 treatment cycles but no pregnancies were achieved. The responses to clomiphene therapy in the hyperprolactinaemic subjects were compared to the assessment of positive feedback mechanisms by means of oestrogen provocation and oestrogen amplification tests and good correlation was obtained. Only those with evidence of positive feedback to these tests were likely to ovulate on clomiphene.


Amenorrhea/blood , Clomiphene/pharmacology , Prolactin/blood , Amenorrhea/drug therapy , Amenorrhea/urine , Chorionic Gonadotropin/pharmacology , Chorionic Gonadotropin/therapeutic use , Clomiphene/therapeutic use , Estrogens/urine , Feedback , Female , Humans , Ovulation/drug effects
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