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  • Title: Differential sex steroid negative feedback regulation of pulsatile follicle-stimulating hormone secretion in healthy older men: deconvolution analysis and steady-state sex-steroid hormone infusions in frequently sampled healthy older individuals.
    Author: Veldhuis JD, Iranmanesh A, Samojlik E, Urban RJ.
    Journal: J Clin Endocrinol Metab; 1997 Apr; 82(4):1248-54. PubMed ID: 9100603.
    Abstract:
    The healthy aging male reproductive axis tends to exhibit a progressive decline in serum concentrations of biologically available testosterone with gradual concomitant reciprocal increases in both LH and FSH concentrations. However, relatively little is known about the sex steroid-mediated negative feedback regulation of physiologically pulsatile gonadotropin release in general, and episodic FSH release in particular, in older males. To examine the steroid hormone negative feedback control of pulsatile FSH secretion in healthy older men, we applied multiparameter deconvolution analysis to serum FSH (immunoradiometric assay) profiles obtained by sampling every 10 min over 24 h during steady state (4.5-day) infusions of estradiol (E2; 48 micrograms/day), 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone (DHT; 7.0 mg/day), or 5% dextrose in water in five healthy older men, aged 60-73 yr. We observed the following principal responses: 1) both E2 and DHT significantly suppressed mean and 24-h integrated serum FSH concentrations (P < 0.032); 2) the calculated daily secretion rate of FSH fell significantly in all five individuals during DHT infusion; 3) the apparent half-life of FSH decreased during E2 (but not DHT) infusion; 4) DHT infusion reduced the mass and frequency of FSH secretory bursts significantly; 5) neither E2 nor DHT treatment significantly attenuated the release of FSH stimulated by consecutive iv injections of GnRH (10 and 100 micrograms); and 6) integrated 24-h serum LH (immunoradiometric assay) concentrations decreased significantly during both DHT and E2 infusions, whereas mean LH release after the serial GnRH injections was not altered. Compared to younger men studied earlier in an identical fashion, older men had significantly reduced FSH intersecretory burst intervals, reflecting a higher FSH pulse frequency at baseline and during the steroid infusions and a significantly lower mass of FSH secreted per burst during E2 infusion. We conclude that healthy older men maintain intact negative feedback responsiveness of the hypothalamo-pituitary gonadotroph unit to exogenously delivered sex steroid hormones, and that individual sex steroid hormones differentially regulate specific features of pulsatile FSH release and half-life in older men.
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