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RF10 | PMON215 Greater changes in metabolic hormones are associated with a smaller decrease in pulsatile LH secretion in response to short term moderate energy restriction in healthy, young women

BACKGROUND: Energy restriction may result in hypothalamic amenorrhea by inhibiting GnRH secretion and downstream pulsatile LH secretion. Energy restriction also leads to adaptive changes in metabolic hormones. We sought to determine whether metabolic changes in response to energy restriction predict...

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Autores principales: Shekhar, Skand, Tonleu, Joselyne Tessa, Okigbo, Chinelo C, Leka, Helen, Kim, Anne E, Purse, Bona, Zaccaro, Daneil, Soldin, Steven J, Hirsch, Katie R, Smith-Ryan, Abbie E, Hall, Janet E
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9625577/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvac150.1464
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author Shekhar, Skand
Tonleu, Joselyne Tessa
Okigbo, Chinelo C
Leka, Helen
Kim, Anne E
Purse, Bona
Zaccaro, Daneil
Soldin, Steven J
Hirsch, Katie R
Smith-Ryan, Abbie E
Hall, Janet E
author_facet Shekhar, Skand
Tonleu, Joselyne Tessa
Okigbo, Chinelo C
Leka, Helen
Kim, Anne E
Purse, Bona
Zaccaro, Daneil
Soldin, Steven J
Hirsch, Katie R
Smith-Ryan, Abbie E
Hall, Janet E
author_sort Shekhar, Skand
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Energy restriction may result in hypothalamic amenorrhea by inhibiting GnRH secretion and downstream pulsatile LH secretion. Energy restriction also leads to adaptive changes in metabolic hormones. We sought to determine whether metabolic changes in response to energy restriction predict or mitigate inhibition of GnRH secretion. METHODS: Nineteen healthy women, (mean age ± SD; 23.36 ± 2.08 yrs) with regular ovulatory cycles and no evidence of energy restriction or excessive exercise, underwent two 5-day dietary interventions with identical exercise in the early follicular phase of two menstrual cycles. A neutral energy availability (NEA; 45 kCal/kg*LBM/d) was followed by a deficient energy availability (DEA; 20 kCal/kg*LBM/d) diet. On day five of each intervention, body composition was analyzed (BodPod®), and blood was sampled between 0800 —1600 hours for LH, TSH and GH, every 10 min, cortisol every 30 min, T3, reverse T3 (rT3) and T4 every 60 min, free T3 (FT3), free T4 (FT4) and TBG at 0800 h and 1600 h. We correlated means of pulsatile LH pulse frequency (LHPF) with integrated metabolic hormone changes across the day in the subset of women with reduced or unchanged LHPF after DEA (n=10) using linear regression. RESULTS: In ∼50% of healthy young women, LHPF decreased or was unchanged in response to short-term moderate energy deprivation. BMI and bodyweight declined after DEA in both groups while % fat mass was unchanged. TSH, T3, leptin, insulin declined, and T4 increased from NEA to DEA while glucose, cortisol and GH were unchanged. In subjects with reduced/unchanged LHPF, % delta T3 correlated inversely with delta LHPF (r=-0.727, p=0.017). Similarly, non-fasting delta TSH correlated inversely with % delta LHPF (r=-0.643, p=0.045), and % delta AUC TSH (r=-0.642, p=0.045) correlated inversely with DEA LHPF. Percent delta insulin (r= -0.722, p=0.018) and % delta insulin AUC (r= – 0.688, p=0.028) correlated inversely with delta LHPF. Percent delta insulin-glucose ratio (r=-0.772, p=0.009) and % change in AUC insulin-glucose ratio (r=-0.759, p=0.011) also correlated inversely with delta LHPF. This inverse relationship was preserved when insulin was normalized for caloric intake (n-insulin) was correlated with % delta LHPF (r=-0.722, p=0.018) and % delta AUC n-insulin correlated with delta LHPF (r= -0.631 and p= 0.050). Delta AUC leptin (r=-0.684, p=0.029) and % delta AUC leptin (r=-0.670, p=0.034) also correlated inversely with delta LHPF. Mean cortisol at NEA correlated inversely with LHPF during DEA (r=-0.816, p=0.007), implying that higher baseline cortisol levels may predict a greater relative fall in LHPF. Cortisol AUC in DEA also correlated inversely with LHPF in DEA (r=-0.722, p=0.028). CONCLUSION: Our data suggest that greater changes in metabolic hormones may protect against the inhibitory effect of moderate energy deprivation on GnRH secretion in healthy young women with normal reproductive function. Presentation: Saturday, June 11, 2022 1:30 p.m. - 1:35 p.m., Monday, June 13, 2022 12:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
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spelling pubmed-96255772022-11-14 RF10 | PMON215 Greater changes in metabolic hormones are associated with a smaller decrease in pulsatile LH secretion in response to short term moderate energy restriction in healthy, young women Shekhar, Skand Tonleu, Joselyne Tessa Okigbo, Chinelo C Leka, Helen Kim, Anne E Purse, Bona Zaccaro, Daneil Soldin, Steven J Hirsch, Katie R Smith-Ryan, Abbie E Hall, Janet E J Endocr Soc Reproductive Endocrinology BACKGROUND: Energy restriction may result in hypothalamic amenorrhea by inhibiting GnRH secretion and downstream pulsatile LH secretion. Energy restriction also leads to adaptive changes in metabolic hormones. We sought to determine whether metabolic changes in response to energy restriction predict or mitigate inhibition of GnRH secretion. METHODS: Nineteen healthy women, (mean age ± SD; 23.36 ± 2.08 yrs) with regular ovulatory cycles and no evidence of energy restriction or excessive exercise, underwent two 5-day dietary interventions with identical exercise in the early follicular phase of two menstrual cycles. A neutral energy availability (NEA; 45 kCal/kg*LBM/d) was followed by a deficient energy availability (DEA; 20 kCal/kg*LBM/d) diet. On day five of each intervention, body composition was analyzed (BodPod®), and blood was sampled between 0800 —1600 hours for LH, TSH and GH, every 10 min, cortisol every 30 min, T3, reverse T3 (rT3) and T4 every 60 min, free T3 (FT3), free T4 (FT4) and TBG at 0800 h and 1600 h. We correlated means of pulsatile LH pulse frequency (LHPF) with integrated metabolic hormone changes across the day in the subset of women with reduced or unchanged LHPF after DEA (n=10) using linear regression. RESULTS: In ∼50% of healthy young women, LHPF decreased or was unchanged in response to short-term moderate energy deprivation. BMI and bodyweight declined after DEA in both groups while % fat mass was unchanged. TSH, T3, leptin, insulin declined, and T4 increased from NEA to DEA while glucose, cortisol and GH were unchanged. In subjects with reduced/unchanged LHPF, % delta T3 correlated inversely with delta LHPF (r=-0.727, p=0.017). Similarly, non-fasting delta TSH correlated inversely with % delta LHPF (r=-0.643, p=0.045), and % delta AUC TSH (r=-0.642, p=0.045) correlated inversely with DEA LHPF. Percent delta insulin (r= -0.722, p=0.018) and % delta insulin AUC (r= – 0.688, p=0.028) correlated inversely with delta LHPF. Percent delta insulin-glucose ratio (r=-0.772, p=0.009) and % change in AUC insulin-glucose ratio (r=-0.759, p=0.011) also correlated inversely with delta LHPF. This inverse relationship was preserved when insulin was normalized for caloric intake (n-insulin) was correlated with % delta LHPF (r=-0.722, p=0.018) and % delta AUC n-insulin correlated with delta LHPF (r= -0.631 and p= 0.050). Delta AUC leptin (r=-0.684, p=0.029) and % delta AUC leptin (r=-0.670, p=0.034) also correlated inversely with delta LHPF. Mean cortisol at NEA correlated inversely with LHPF during DEA (r=-0.816, p=0.007), implying that higher baseline cortisol levels may predict a greater relative fall in LHPF. Cortisol AUC in DEA also correlated inversely with LHPF in DEA (r=-0.722, p=0.028). CONCLUSION: Our data suggest that greater changes in metabolic hormones may protect against the inhibitory effect of moderate energy deprivation on GnRH secretion in healthy young women with normal reproductive function. Presentation: Saturday, June 11, 2022 1:30 p.m. - 1:35 p.m., Monday, June 13, 2022 12:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Oxford University Press 2022-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9625577/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvac150.1464 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Reproductive Endocrinology
Shekhar, Skand
Tonleu, Joselyne Tessa
Okigbo, Chinelo C
Leka, Helen
Kim, Anne E
Purse, Bona
Zaccaro, Daneil
Soldin, Steven J
Hirsch, Katie R
Smith-Ryan, Abbie E
Hall, Janet E
RF10 | PMON215 Greater changes in metabolic hormones are associated with a smaller decrease in pulsatile LH secretion in response to short term moderate energy restriction in healthy, young women
title RF10 | PMON215 Greater changes in metabolic hormones are associated with a smaller decrease in pulsatile LH secretion in response to short term moderate energy restriction in healthy, young women
title_full RF10 | PMON215 Greater changes in metabolic hormones are associated with a smaller decrease in pulsatile LH secretion in response to short term moderate energy restriction in healthy, young women
title_fullStr RF10 | PMON215 Greater changes in metabolic hormones are associated with a smaller decrease in pulsatile LH secretion in response to short term moderate energy restriction in healthy, young women
title_full_unstemmed RF10 | PMON215 Greater changes in metabolic hormones are associated with a smaller decrease in pulsatile LH secretion in response to short term moderate energy restriction in healthy, young women
title_short RF10 | PMON215 Greater changes in metabolic hormones are associated with a smaller decrease in pulsatile LH secretion in response to short term moderate energy restriction in healthy, young women
title_sort rf10 | pmon215 greater changes in metabolic hormones are associated with a smaller decrease in pulsatile lh secretion in response to short term moderate energy restriction in healthy, young women
topic Reproductive Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9625577/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvac150.1464
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