Ovulation induction with subcutaneous pulsatile gonadotropin-releasing hormone: singleton pregnancies in patients with previous multiple pregnancies after gonadotropin therapy *

1983 
Three patients with hypothalamic amenorrhea who had previously had multiple pregnancies following gonadotropin therapy were treated with subcutaneous pulsatile gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), administered by a portable pump. After treatment with lower doses in some cases, pulses of 5 to 10 μ g were given at 90-minute intervals, resulting in ovulation on six occasions. Ovarian steroid profiles closely resembled those of normal ovulatory cycles, and spontaneous ovulation of a single ovarian follicle was consistently demonstrated by ultrasound. Singleton pregnancy was confirmed in each patient. The results imply normal operation of the ovarian-pituitary feedback loop and suggest that subcutaneous pulsatile GnRH therapy is a safe and effective means of ovulation induction in clomiphene-resistant cases of hypothalamic amenorrhea and may possibly become the preferred method of treatment.
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