THE EFFECT OF THYROTROPHIN‐RELEASING HORMONE ON PLASMA PROLACTIN AND THYROTROPHIN LEVELS IN PRIMARY HYPOTHYROIDISM
1973
SUMMARY
Plasma prolactin and thyrotrophin (TSH) were measured by radioimmunoassay before, at 20 min and 60 min after the intravenous administration of 200 μg thyrotrophin-releasing hormone (TRH) in thirty-two patients with untreated primary hypothyroidism and in sixteen normal volunteers. Whereas basal plasma TSH was markedly elevated in all the patients with hypothyroidism, a slight, but significant increase (P<0.05) in basal plasma prolactin in primary hypothyroidism could only be demonstrated by matching for age, sex and circulating gonadotrophin levels, ten patients with hypothyroidism with ten normal volunteers. There was, however, no significant difference between the two groups, matched or unmatched, in the plasma prolactin levels, in contrast to the plasma TSH levels, following TRH administration. No apparent relationship was found between basal prolactin and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH) or TSH.
Assuming the release of prolactin by TRH to be of physiological significance, the results suggest that TRH secretion by the hypothalamus may be increased in untreated hypothyroidism and that low levels of circulating thyroid hormone increase the sensitivity of the pituitary thyrotrophs, but not the prolactin secreting cells, to TRH. Markedly elevated plasma prolactin levels associated with galactorrhoea were not seen in primary hypothyroidism in the absence of the puerperium or oestrogen therapy.
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