The corpus luteum insufficiency: a multifactorial disease

B Hinney, C Henze, W Kuhn… - The Journal of Clinical …, 1996 - academic.oup.com
B Hinney, C Henze, W Kuhn, W Wuttke
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1996academic.oup.com
The pulsatile release pattern of LH during the entire menstrual cycle is well defined;
however, the response of corpora lutea to these LH pulses in patients suffering from corpus
luteum insufficiencies (CLI) is largely unknown. Patients suffering from CLI were selected
from infertile patients on the basis of low progesterone (P< 25 nmol/L) in a blood sample
withdrawn during a monitoring cycle. During the next cycle, nine blood samples were
collected during the follicular and luteal phase and follicular development was assessed by …
Abstract
The pulsatile release pattern of LH during the entire menstrual cycle is well defined; however, the response of corpora lutea to these LH pulses in patients suffering from corpus luteum insufficiencies (CLI) is largely unknown. Patients suffering from CLI were selected from infertile patients on the basis of low progesterone (P < 25 nmol/L) in a blood sample withdrawn during a monitoring cycle. During the next cycle, nine blood samples were collected during the follicular and luteal phase and follicular development was assessed by vaginal sonography. Of 109 patients who had a CLI in the monitoring cycle, 55 had a CLI again, and 38 women agreed to undergo assessment of pulsatile hormone secretion. These women again had P < 25 nmol/L at days 6 and 7 of the luteal phase and blood samples were withdrawn through antecubital vein catheters from 0900-1700 h at 10-min intervals on days 7, 8, or 9 following ovulation. From 38 patients with such defined CLI, 16 (42%) had no LH episode and significantly lower basal LH levels in comparison with 14 control subjects. Thirteen (34%) of the patients had normal appearing LH episodes despite too low P and E2 concentrations, but their CL did not react to the LH episodes. The remaining 9 patients (24%) had normal LH episodes; their CL reacted to these episodes, but their basal P levels were too low. In all blood samples LH was not only determined using an immunoassay but also by the mouse Leydig cell testosterone production bioassay. It could be established that no CLI exists, which is due to the release of bioinactive LH. It is anticipated that the differentiation of three different types of CLI, one of hypothalamic and two of ovarian origin, may allow the development of differential diagnostic and therapeutic tools in the future.
Oxford University Press