scholarly journals Follicle stimulating hormone measured in unextracted urine throughout the menstrual cycle correlates with age and ovarian reserve

2002 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 641-646 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. J. E. Oosterhuis ◽  
I. Vermes ◽  
H. W.B. Michgelsen ◽  
J. Schoemaker ◽  
C. B. Lambalk
Author(s):  
Kaitlin R Karl ◽  
Fermin Jimenez-Krassel ◽  
Emily Gibbings ◽  
Janet L H Ireland ◽  
Zaramasina L Clark ◽  
...  

Abstract When women with small ovarian reserves are subjected to assisted reproductive technologies, high doses of gonadotropins are linked to high oocyte and embryo wastage and low live birth rates. We hypothesized that excessive follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) doses during superovulation are detrimental to ovulatory follicle function in individuals with a small ovarian reserve. To test this hypothesis, heifers with small ovarian reserves were injected twice daily for 4 days, beginning on Day 1 of the estrous cycle with 35, 70, 140, or 210 IU doses of Folltropin-V (FSH). Each heifer (n = 8) was superovulated using a Williams Latin Square Design. During each superovulation regimen, three prostaglandin F2α injections were given at 12-h interval, starting at the seventh FSH injection to regress the newly formed corpus luteum (CL). Human chorionic gonadotropin was injected 12 h after the last (8th) FSH injection to induce ovulation. Daily ultrasonography and blood sampling were used to determine the number and size of follicles and corpora lutea, uterine thickness, and circulating concentrations of estradiol, progesterone, and anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH). The highest doses of FSH did not increase AMH, progesterone, number of ovulatory-size follicles, uterine thickness, or number of CL. However, estradiol production and ovulation rate were lower for heifers given high FSH doses compared to lower doses, indicating detrimental effects on ovulatory follicle function.


1959 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. S. BROWN

SUMMARY Urinary gonadotrophins were assayed against HMG 20 A during the menstrual cycle in four subjects by methods believed to measure follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and total gonadotrophin respectively. The gonadotrophins showed qualitative fluctuation. Three subjects showed maximum levels of total gonadotrophin near the middle of the cycle, and three showed a notably different pattern of excretion of FSH with high values in the first part of the cycle. Gonadotrophins from patients with secondary amenorrhoea showed no qualitative fluctuation, but treatment with stilboestrol apparently caused a rise in excretion of interstitial cell stimulating hormone in three out of nine patients. The results of ninety-eight assays are recorded with fiducial limits and are discussed with reference to the specificity of the methods and the importance of inter-assay errors.


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