Filicori M, Butler J P, Crowley W F
J Clin Invest. 1984 Jun;73(6):1638-47. doi: 10.1172/JCI111370.
The pattern of episodic gonadotropin release was studied in 15 normal female volunteers during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle with 24 h of blood sampling for follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) levels at 10-min intervals. Six subjects (two in the early, two in the mid-, and two in the late luteal phase) also had each of these specimens processed for progesterone levels. A progressive slowing of LH pulsations was present across the luteal phase with the mean LH pulse frequency declining from 15.2 pulses/24 h in the early to 8.4/24 h in the late luteal phase. A trend towards reduction in the amplitude of LH pulses was also observed (12.3 +/- 2.2 SD mIU/ml in the early vs. 8.6 +/- 3.4 mIU/ml in the late luteal phase; NS). In addition, LH pulses of heterogeneous amplitude were identified during the same 24-h study. The mean +/- SD of the larger and of the smaller LH pulses was 16.9 +/- 4.7 and 2.3 +/- 1.0 mIU/ml, respectively (P less than 0.001). While the slowing of the frequency of all LH pulses correlated well (r = 0.80, P less than 0.001) with the day of the luteal phase and poorly with the actual plasma progesterone levels, the incidence of the small LH pulses was highest in the mid-luteal phase and correlated well with the mean progesterone plasma levels (r = 0.63, P less than 0.01). In the early luteal phase, the pattern of progesterone secretion was stable over the 24-h studies and showed no relationship to episodic LH release. In contrast, in the mid- and late luteal phase, plasma progesterone concentrations rapidly fluctuated during the 24-h studies from levels as low as 2.3 to peaks of 40.1 ng/ml, often within the course of minutes. Progesterone increments closely attended episodes of LH release, as documented by the significant (P less than 0.05) cross-correlation between LH and progesterone levels, at time lags of 25-55 min. The results of this study indicate that in the human luteal phase: (a) the frequency of pulsatile release of LH declines progressively and correlates well with the duration of exposure to progressively and correlates well with the duration of exposure to progesterone; (b) the amplitude of LH pulses varies with the appearance of an increased percentage of smaller pulses correlating well with the acute level of progesterone; (c) in the early luteal phase, the pattern of progesterone secretion is stable; (d) in the mid- and late luteal phase, progesterone secretion is episodic, and correlates with LH pulsatile release; and (e) single progesterone estimations in the mid- and late luteal phase do not accurately reflect corpus luteum adequacy.
在月经周期的黄体期,对15名正常女性志愿者的促性腺激素释放模式进行了研究,每10分钟采集一次血样,持续24小时,检测卵泡刺激素(FSH)和黄体生成素(LH)水平。6名受试者(黄体期早期、中期和晚期各2名)的上述每份标本还进行了孕酮水平检测。整个黄体期LH脉冲逐渐减慢,平均LH脉冲频率从黄体期早期的15.2次/24小时降至黄体期晚期的8.4次/24小时。还观察到LH脉冲幅度有降低趋势(黄体期早期为12.3±2.2 SD mIU/ml,黄体期晚期为8.6±3.4 mIU/ml;无显著性差异)。此外,在同一24小时研究期间发现了幅度各异的LH脉冲。较大和较小LH脉冲的平均值±标准差分别为16.9±4.7和2.3±1.0 mIU/ml(P<0.001)。虽然所有LH脉冲频率的减慢与黄体期天数密切相关(r = 0.80,P<0.001),与实际血浆孕酮水平相关性较差,但小LH脉冲的发生率在黄体期中期最高,且与平均血浆孕酮水平密切相关(r = 0.63,P<0.01)。在黄体期早期,24小时研究期间孕酮分泌模式稳定,与LH的脉冲式释放无关。相比之下,在黄体期中期和晚期,24小时研究期间血浆孕酮浓度迅速波动,从低至2.3 ng/ml到峰值40.1 ng/ml,常在数分钟内发生变化。孕酮的升高紧跟LH释放事件,LH和孕酮水平在25 - 55分钟的时间滞后存在显著的交叉相关性(P<0.05)证明了这一点。本研究结果表明,在人类黄体期:(a)LH脉冲式释放频率逐渐下降,与暴露于孕酮的持续时间密切相关;(b)LH脉冲幅度随较小脉冲百分比的增加而变化,与孕酮的急性水平密切相关;(c)在黄体期早期,孕酮分泌模式稳定;(d)在黄体期中期和晚期,孕酮分泌是脉冲式的,与LH脉冲式释放相关;(e)在黄体期中期和晚期单次孕酮测定不能准确反映黄体功能是否充足。