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  • Title: Effect of opioid blockade on insulin and growth hormone (GH) secretion in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome: the heterogeneity of impaired GH secretion is related to both obesity and hyperinsulinism.
    Author: Villa P, Valle D, Mancini A, De Marinis L, Pavone V, Fulghesu AM, Mancuso S, Lanzone A.
    Journal: Fertil Steril; 1999 Jan; 71(1):115-21. PubMed ID: 9935127.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: To investigate the involvement of opioid tone, obesity, and hyperinsulinemia in GH secretion in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). DESIGN: Controlled clinical study. SETTING: Catholic University of Sacred Heart School of Medicine in Rome, Italy. PATIENT(S): Twenty-two patients with PCOS and 14 healthy, normally ovulating volunteers, matched for age and body mass index. INTERVENTION(S): Patients underwent a GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) test and an oral glucose tolerance test before and after 4-5 weeks of treatment with 50 mg/d of naltrexone. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Serum concentrations of GH, insulin, glucose, steroids, and gonadotropins, as well as the GH area under the curve (AUC-GH) and the insulin area under the curve (AUC-I), were measured before and after naltrexone treatment. RESULT(S): In patients with PCOS, the administration of naltrexone increased the GH response to the GHRH test without interfering with the insulin response to the oral glucose tolerance test. However, the GH response to the GHRH test was improved significantly only in lean patients with PCOS, whereas obese patients with PCOS did not show any improvement in GH secretion. In obese control subjects, the treatment reduced plasma basal insulin concentrations and increased the AUC-GH, whereas in lean control subjects, the treatment reduced the GHRH-induced response. In normoinsulinemic patients with PCOS, the GH response to the GHRH test increased significantly after treatment, whereas the AUC-I was not affected. In hyperinsulinemic patients with PCOS, treatment with naltrexone significantly reduced the AUC-I, whereas the AUC-GH increased only in lean hyperinsulinemic patients with PCOS. CONCLUSION(S): Naltrexone treatment improves GHRH-induced GH secretion in patients with PCOS. However, this GH response is heterogeneously represented in relation to both obesity and hyperinsulinism.
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