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LHRH pulse frequency in normal and infertile men
Authors:F C Wu  P L Taylor  R E Sellar
Affiliation:MRC Reproductive Biology Unit, Centre for Reproductive Biology, Edinburgh.
Abstract:The aim of this study was to examine the hypothesis that decreased LHRH pulse frequency may be responsible for the preferential rise in FSH in infertile men. The LH pulse pattern was determined as an index of hypothalamic LHRH secretion in 21 infertile patients with idiopathic azoospermia or oligoasthenozoospermia and 14 fertile age-matched controls by frequent blood sampling at 10-min intervals for 24 h. The infertile patients were further divided into three groups according to their relative concentrations of FSH and LH: (1) normal FSH and LH, (2) raised FSH but normal LH, and (3) raised FSH and LH. LH pulses were detected by a computerized algorithm (Munro) validated against a threshold method. Concentrations of FSH, testosterone, sex hormone-binding globulin and oestradiol were measured in pooled plasma. Luteinizing hormone pulse frequencies in normal men were not significantly different from the infertile group as a whole. Similarly, mean LH pulse frequencies in infertile subgroups 1, 2 and 3 were not significantly lower than normal. Pulse interval, however, was increased in subgroup 1 compared with normal. Mean 24 h LH in group 2 was significantly higher than normal, but still within the normal range. The total testosterone, but not the free testosterone index was significantly decreased in the infertile group compared with normal. There was no correlation between mean FSH and LH pulse frequency or interval. In conclusion, our results show that in patients with seminiferous tubular dysfunction, the typical pattern of raised plasma FSH, increased LH pulse amplitude, raised FSH: LH ratio and normal or marginally low testosterone was not associated with any significant deviations in LHRH pulse frequency from the range observed in normal fertile men. This is not compatible with the hypothesis that decreased LHRH pulse frequency is associated with or the cause of the preferential rise in FSH in men with idiopathic infertility. Thus unlike anovulatory infertility in females, functional defects of hypothalamic LHRH secretion remain an uncommon finding in male infertility. Attempts to treat idiopathic oligozoospermia by altering LHRH pulse frequency is therefore unlikely to yield any clinical benefit.
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