Patterns of LH and FSH in men during high-frequency blood sampling.

Autor: Scheele F; Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Academic Hospital of the Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands., Lambalk CB, Schoemaker J, van Kessel H, de Koning J, van Dieten JA, van Rees GP, de Vries Robles-Korsen TJ
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: The Journal of endocrinology [J Endocrinol] 1987 Jul; Vol. 114 (1), pp. 153-60.
DOI: 10.1677/joe.0.1140153
Abstrakt: The aim of the study was to test the hypothesis that in serial determinations of concentrations of LH and FSH involving blood samples taken every minute, the observed pulses of LH and FSH which last less than 3-4 min might not be a physiological phenomenon but part of the 'noise' of the radioimmunoassay or blood-sampling technique. Blood was sampled every minute for a period of 90 min in six men. During the first 45 min, blood was sampled by means of vacuum tubes only. During the second 45 min, sampling took place with a syringe via a rubber stopper, either using a tourniquet (n = 3) or flushing the cannula with heparinized saline. Three criteria were used to identify variations in the patterns of LH and FSH as true hormonal changes. First, a threshold was used which had to be exceeded by the difference between nadir and maximum values before a pulse could be identified. An average of approximately six pulses per 90 min was found in both the LH and FSH series. The majority of these pulses lasted less than 3-4 min. In two subjects, larger LH pulses of longer duration were measured. Secondly, differences between duplicate measurements of nadir and/or maximum values of more than one-third of the amplitude of a pulse were considered unacceptable. This involved about 75% of the pulses. Thirdly, the reproducibility of the hormone variations was estimated. In one subject, concentrations of LH were measured four times in four separate assays.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Databáze: MEDLINE