-
Views
-
Cite
Cite
ALBERT BECKERS, ACHILLE STEVENAERT, JEAN-MICHEL FOIDART, GEORGES HENNEN, FRANCIS FRANKENNE, Placental and Pituitary Growth Hormone Secretion during Pregnancy in Acromegalic Women, The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, Volume 71, Issue 3, 1 September 1990, Pages 725–731, https://doi.org/10.1210/jcem-71-3-725
- Share Icon Share
It is now well established that during the second half of normal pregnancy, the human placenta secretes its specific GH variant (placental GH) in increasing amounts up to delivery. During the same period, pituitary GH secretion is progressively suppressed. The present study was aimed at clarifying the physiology of GH secretion in pregnant acromegalic women. Two young women remained acromegalic despite transsphenoidal removal of their pituitary adenoma. Increased basal levels of GH and insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) as well as paradoxical GH release after TRH injection were noted. Both women became pregnant and delivered term babies without any complication. In both patients, pituitary GH remained elevated during the entire pregnancy, contrary to the situation in normal women. Paradoxical GH release after TRH treatment was also present, whereas no response was observed in five normal control subjects. GH pulsatility studies revealed a highly pulsatile secretory pattern of pituitary GH, in contrast to that in normal woman, whose placental GH is secreted tonically. Tissue placental GH concentrations were within the range of levels in normal placentas. An increase in serum IGF-I in late pregnancy was also similar to that observed in normal pregnancy.
These findings confirm that increased IGF-I levels are not pituitary GH dependent in late pregnancy. They add new evidence that adenomatous somatotrophs lack an IGF-I-dependent feedback regulation present in normal somatotrophs.