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Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Department of Internal Medicine and National Science Foundation Center for Biological Timing, University of Virginia Health Sciences Center, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908
The
neuroendocrine mechanisms by which estradiol drives growth hormone (GH)
secretion in the human are poorly defined. Here we investigate
estrogen's specific regulation of the 24-h pulsatile, nyctohemeral,
and entropic modes of GH secretion in healthy postmenopausal women.
Volunteers (n = 9) received randomly
ordered placebo versus estradiol-17
(1 mg micronized steroid twice
daily orally) treatment for 7-10 days and underwent blood sampling
at 10-min intervals for 24 h to capture GH release profiles quantitated
in a high-sensitivity chemiluminescence assay. Pulsatile GH secretion
was appraised via deconvolution analysis, nyctohemeral GH rhythms by
cosinor analysis, and the orderliness of GH release patterns via the
approximate entropy statistic. Mean (±SE) 24-h serum GH
concentrations approximately doubled on estrogen treatment (viz., from
0.31 ± 0.03 to 0.51 ± 0.07 µg/l;
P = 0.033). Concomitantly, serum
insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I), luteinizing hormone, and
follicle-stimulating hormone concentrations fell, whereas
thyroid-stimulating hormone and prolactin levels rose
(P < 0.01). The specific
neuroendocrine action of estradiol included
1) a twofold amplified mass of GH secreted per burst, with no significant changes in basal GH release, half-life, pulse frequency, or duration;
2) an augmented amplitude and mesor
of the 24-h rhythm in GH release, with no alteration in acrophase; and
3) greater disorderliness of GH
release (higher approximate entropy). These distinctive and dynamic
reactions to estrogen are consistent with partial withdrawal of
IGF-I's negative feedback and/or accentuated central drive to GH secretion.
estradiol; sex steroid; circadian rhythm; pulse episode; somatotropin
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