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Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, Vol 62, 288-292, Copyright © 1986 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Effects of severe dietary restriction on male reproductive hormones

LJ Hoffer, IZ Beitins, NH Kyung and BR Bistrian

The reproductive hormone response to severe caloric restriction (600 Cal day-1) was studied in six men 33-67% over ideal body weight who completed a 32-day protocol consisting of three periods in the following order: control (4 days), maintenance protein and energy; diet A (14 days), 50 g lean beef protein plus 50 g casein; and diet B (14 days), 50 g lean beef protein plus 50 g carbohydrate. Weight loss (8.7- 12.5 kg) was associated with a decrease in mean blood glucose [4.52 +/- 0.60 (+/- SEM), 3.49 +/- 0.29, and 3.80 +/- 0.30 mM] and an increase in beta-hydroxybutyrate (less than 0.10, 2.09 +/- 0.44, and 1.06 +/- 0.34 mM), as determined on the final morning of each period. On the same days, mean serum FSH and LH responses to LHRH infusion of 0.2 micrograms min-1 for 4 h (expressed as milliinternational units per ml area under the concentration-time curve) were: FSH, 1558 +/- 359, 1336 +/- 545, and 1337 +/- 321 (P = NS); and LH, 1730 +/- 545, 1612 +/- 481, and 1782 +/- 556 (P = NS), respectively. Basal serum FSH, LH, free testosterone (T), and total T changed, while 24-h urinary LH and FSH excretion increased on diet A only. Unlike 10 days of total fasting, during which the same amount of weight was lost, basal serum FSH and LHRH-stimulated serum FSH responses were both significantly diminished by 25%, and serum T was diminished by 19% (1), these same parameters were little changed by either low energy diet. The increased urinary excretion of FSH and LH during diet A suggests that greater ketosis increases renal gonadotropin clearance.





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