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