Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0432222 (SEM)
47,337 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Forty subfertile men with oligospermia were treated with a synthetic androgen (Mesterolone). The effect of the drug was evaluated by measuring serum testosterone, luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and analysing the semen before and after treatment. The results demonstrated that in twenty-three patients treated for 6-9 months there was a significant decrease in serum testosterone (P less than 0.01); the means +/- SEM before and after treatment were 17.05 +/- 0.95 and 14.7 +/- 0.95 (nmol/l serum) respectively. There was a pronounced increase in serum LH (P less than 0.01), the values being 2.73 +/- 0.26 and 3.61 +/- 0.3 (u/l) respectively. However, no significant difference was found in serum FSH before and after treatment. The sperm concentration showed a variable response to treatment. In twenty-one patients there was either no change or worsening in the sperm concentration, whereas in nineteen patients an improvement was observed. The analysis of variance of sperm concentration and motility for the periods before and after treatment, for all the patients, showed no significant difference in the sperm concentration F1.145 = 2.82 (P=0.1).
...
PMID:The hormone response to a synthetic androgen (mesterolone) in oligospermia. 87 44

In order to investigate whether isolated elevated FSH levels in men with idiopathic oligospermia can be lowered by pulsatile LHRH therapy, six patients were treated for 6 weeks with 5 micrograms LHRH pulses every 2 h. The pulses were delivered from a portable minipump (Zyklomat) through a subcutaneously inserted needle. At the end of treatment prepulse serum LH levels were no different from the levels before treatment while serum FSH was significantly reduced in all patients (16.9 +/- 2.5 U/l vs 11.3 +/- 1.9 U/l, mean +/- SEM; P less than 0.01). The normal FSH range was reached in one of the six patients. The areas under the LH curves following the first and the last (i.e. 504th) pulse were no different, while the areas under the FSH curves were significantly smaller (2870 +/- 434 vs 1776 +/- 237 U/l X min; P less than 0.01). Serum testosterone and oestradiol were significantly higher at the end of treatment (11.0 +/- 1.2 vs 15.2 +/- 1.9 nmol/l 146 +/- 18 vs 214 +/- 25 pmol, respectively). Thus increased FSH levels in men with idiopathic oligospermia can be selectively reduced by pulsatile LHRH treatment. If the increased FSH levels are not the result but rather a factor contributing to the pathogenesis of certain types of oligospermia these findings may have implications for the treatment of this condition.
...
PMID:Selective reduction of elevated FSH levels in infertile men by pulsatile LHRH treatment. 308 94

Androgen insensitivity has been reported to be present in as many as 40% of patients with severe oligospermia. In order to evaluate further the role of androgen resistance in male infertility we studied 24 men with severe oligospermia. Plasma T and LH were measured by RIA and the T X LH product was calculated. Fibroblasts were grown from genital skin obtained during testicular biopsies and androgen receptor maximal binding capacity (BMAX) and affinity (KD) were measured in fibroblast monolayers. Pubic skin 5 alpha-reductase activity, an androgen-dependent enzyme, was measured in skin homogenates. Plasma T values were in the upper normal range [7.0 +/- 1.7 (SEM) ng ml-1] whereas the T X LH product was high (greater than 50) in only six patients. Mean BMAX and KD values for the androgen receptor were normal [BMAX: 788 +/- 259 fmol mg DNA-1 (patients, n = 20), 726 +/- 227 (normal men, n = 20), and KD: 0.27 +/- 0.24 (patients, n = 20), 0.18 +/- 0.09 (normal men, n = 15), respectively]. However, four men had supranormal KD values. The mean BMAX was also normal when the group of men with sperm densities below 10(6) per ejaculate was considered separately. Public skin 5 alpha-reductase activity was normal in all but four patients (patients: 177.1 +/- 91 fmol/mg skin/h, n = 30, normal men: 210 +/- 45, n = 20 patients). In conclusion, androgen receptor BMAX levels were normal in all patients studied, regardless of the sperm density and the T X LH product. Pubic skin 5 alpha-reductase activity was also normal in all but four patients. In these four patients, a qualitative defect of the androgen receptor cannot be excluded. In this group of patients with severe oligospermia, infertility did not seem to be related to quantitative abnormality of the androgen receptor as was previously reported.
...
PMID:Androgen insensitivity in oligospermic men: a reappraisal. 309 23

Labeled methyltrienelone was used to determine androgen receptor (AR) levels in cultured pubic skin fibroblasts in 40 infertile men with primary seminiferous tubule disorders and 18 normal men. LH pulse patterns and mean serum LH levels were also determined by blood sampling at 10-min intervals for 6 h. The infertile men and the normal men had similar mean receptor levels [mean, 28.1 +/- 2.0 (+/- SEM) and 24.8 +/- 1.8 fmol/mg protein, respectively]. However, 5 men with chromosomal disorders had a higher mean AR level (41.3 +/- 6.2 fmol/mg protein) than the normal men, and 5 of the remaining infertile men (14.2%) had receptor levels that were less than the minimum value in normal men. In men with idiopathic oligospermia, 19.0% had low receptor levels. Although mean serum FSH and testosterone levels were similar in the infertile men with low AR levels and in the normal men, mean LH levels were significantly elevated in this group (7.1 vs. 3.6 IU/L), the higher values being a result of increased LH pulse amplitude (mean, 5.6 vs. 2.8 IU/L). The LH-testosterone product (an index of androgen resistance) was also elevated in these men. When infertile men with low AR levels were matched with infertile men with normal receptor levels, the mean LH values were significantly elevated in the former, as was the LH-testosterone product. Testosterone values were similar in the two groups of men. After excluding subjects with chromosomal disorders, there were no significant correlations between AR levels and other indices of androgen action, such as semen volume, seminal fructose, or sex hormone-binding globulin levels. We conclude that AR levels are higher in patients with severe testicular failure associated with X-chromosome disorders. Also, AR defects were found in 19.0% of infertile men with idiopathic oligospermia. Finally, elevation of mean LH levels in men with seminiferous tubule disorders may reflect resistance to androgen action.
...
PMID:Variable androgen receptor levels in infertile men. 310 95

Chronic treatment with agonist analogs of GnRH results in reversible oligospermia in man, but leads to impotence and decreased libido due to a concomitant fall in serum testosterone (T) concentrations. We, therefore, assessed the effects of combined treatment with a potent GnRH agonist and T on gonadotropins and spermatogenesis in normal men, anticipating that addition of androgen would prevent agonist-induced changes in libido. Seven normal men were treated with 200 micrograms of the GnRH agonist D-(Nal2)6GnRH (GnRH-A), sc, daily for 16 weeks. In addition, 200 mg T enanthate were administered every 2 weeks for the entire 16-week treatment period. Basal LH, FSH, and T concentrations were measured every week during a 5-week control period, daily on treatment days 0, 1-10, 14, 18, 22, 26, and 28, every week thereafter until day 56, and every 2 weeks thereafter for the remainder of the treatment and recovery phases. Detailed analysis of LH and FSH over the 24-h period was performed by multiple blood sampling on days 0, 1, 10, 28, 56, 84, and 112. Semen analyses were performed every week during the control phase and every 2 weeks during the treatment and recovery phases. The mean sperm count declined by 83%, to a nadir of 16.6 +/- 6.2 (+/- SEM) million/ml. One subject had no significant decrease in sperm count. Azoospermia was not achieved in any subject. Basal serum LH concentrations, after an early phase of stimulation, declined to near baseline by day 14. However, basal, 24-h integrated serum LH concentrations, and 24-h urinary LH excretion were not significantly lowered by combined treatment. Bioassayable serum LH concentrations, however, declined significantly from 20.4 +/- 6.3 to 4.5 +/- 0.5 mIU/ml, and the bioassayable to immunoassayable LH ratio decreased from 2.1 +/- 1.0 to 0.7 +/- 0.1 after 16 weeks of GnRH-A treatment. Basal and 24-h integrated FSH concentrations, after an initial period of stimulation, declined progressively to baseline by days 5-6 and were significantly below baseline by day 112. Serum T concentrations did not fall into the hypogonadal (less than 250 ng/dl) range in any subject at any time during the treatment period. After discontinuation of treatment, LH, FSH, and sperm counts returned to normal in all subjects. Thus, single daily injection of GnRH-A and T failed to predictably induce azoospermia in normal men over the 16-week treatment period.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hormonal effects of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonist in the human male. III. Effects of long term combined treatment with GnRH agonist and androgen. 392 Feb 37

The relative roles of FSH and LH in the control of human spermatogenesis are not well established. We previously reported that supraphysiological doses of hCG can stimulate sperm production in gonadotropin-suppressed normal men despite prepubertal FSH levels. To determine whether more nearly physiological levels of human LH (hLH) also can stimulate spermatogenesis when FSH levels are suppressed, we administered hLH to normal men whose endogenous gonadotropin levels and sperm production were suppressed by exogenous testosterone enanthate (T). After a 3-month control period, 11 normal men received 200 mg T, im, weekly to suppress LH and FSH. T administration alone was continued for 3-4 months until 3 successive sperm concentrations (performed twice monthly) revealed azoospermia or severe oligospermia (sperm concentrations, less than 4 million/ml). Then, while continuing T, 4 of the 11 men (experimental subjects) simultaneously received 1100 IU hLH, sc, daily for 4-6 months to replace LH activity, leaving FSH activity suppressed. The effect on sperm production of the selective FSH deficiency produced by hLH plus T administration was determined. The remaining 7 men (control subjects) continued to receive T alone at the same dosage, without gonadotropin replacement, for an additional 6 months. In the four experimental subjects, sperm concentrations increased significantly from 0.7 +/- 0.7 million/ml (mean +/- SEM) during T treatment alone to 19 +/- 4 million/ml during hLH plus T administration (P less than 0.001). However, none of the men achieved sperm concentrations consistently in their own pretreatment range. Sperm motilities and morphologies were normal in all four subjects by the end of hLH plus T administration. In contrast, sperm concentrations in the seven control subjects remained suppressed (less than 3 million/ml) throughout the entire period of prolonged T administration alone. Serum LH bioactivity, determined monthly by in vitro mouse Leydig cell bioassay in all four experimental subjects, was markedly suppressed during T administration alone (120 +/- 10 ng/ml) compared to that during the control period (390 +/- 20 ng/ml; P less than 0.001). With the addition of hLH to T, LH bioactivity returned to control levels (400 +/- 40 ng/ml; P = NS compared to control value). Serum FSH levels determined monthly by RIA were reduced from 98 +/- 12 ng/ml during the control period to undetectable levels (less than 25 ng/ml) during the T alone and the hLH plus T periods (P less than 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Stimulation of sperm production by human luteinizing hormone in gonadotropin-suppressed normal men. 643 86

The measurement of serum FSH is useful in the diagnostic workup of the infertile male, but fails to predict the presence of sperm in testicular tissue. We investigated whether inhibin B reflects testicular morphology and the presence of sperm more accurately than FSH. Serum inhibin B and gonadotropin levels were determined in 91 infertile men undergoing diagnostic bilateral testicular biopsy. In 52 of the 91 patients multiple samples were taken for testicular sperm extraction (TESE). Inhibin B levels were (mean +/- SEM) 238+/-32 pg/mL in men with normal spermatogenesis (n = 9), 102+/-18 pg/mL in men with spermatogenetic arrest (n = 15), 98+/-16 pg/mL in hypospermatogenesis (n = 23), 41+/-6 pg/mL in focal Sertoli cell-only syndrome (SCO; n = 26), and 27+/-8 pg/mL in complete SCO (n = 18). The percentage of SCO tubuli was more strongly correlated to serum inhibin B (r = -0.58; P<0.01) than to FSH (r = 0.34; P<0.05). Similarly, the percentage of tubules with elongated spermatids was significantly (P<0.05) more strongly correlated to serum inhibin B (r = 0.65; P<0.01) than to FSH (r = -0.4; P<0.01). Thus, inhibin B is slightly more sensitive than FSH as an index of the spermatogenic status. Neither FSH nor inhibin B alone, however, could predict the type of spermatogenetic damage exactly. The combination of FSH and inhibin B had high diagnostic sensitivity (88%) and specificity (83%) for the presence of elongated spermatids in testicular biopsies. Sperm could be retrieved in 34 (65%) of the TESE patients. The combination of inhibin B and FSH measurement showed a sensitivity of 75% and a specificity of 73% when identifying patients in whom sperm could possibly be retrieved by TESE. We conclude that although the measurement of serum inhibin B improves the sensitivity of predictive tests for the presence of sperm in histology or for TESE, this parameter cannot accurately predict TESE outcome.
...
PMID:Serum inhibin B in combination with serum follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) is a more sensitive marker than serum FSH alone for impaired spermatogenesis in men, but cannot predict the presence of sperm in testicular tissue samples. 1040 26

We investigated the effect of lithium chloride administration (Sigma): 1 mmol/kg b.w. i.p./day for 35 days on the testes and sperm of viscacha (Lagostomus maximus maximus), a nocturnal rodent found only in the pampas of Argentina. The histological study showed that hypospermatogenesis and the sperm number per mL decreased markedly in comparison with the controls (treatment group: 315 x 10(6) +/- 77 x 10(6); control group: 693 x 10(6) +/- 39 x 10(6), Means +/- SEM, Student's t-test: p < 0.05). The sperm motility and viability were also affected. Under the same treatment, the testicular tissue and the sperm of rats were not damaged. Moreover, lithium induced these changes when the plasm levels were within the therapeutic range in humans. Our results provide evidence for the claim that viscacha testes and sperm react very sensitively to low doses of lithium, whereas these concentrations do not produce damage in rats.
...
PMID:Lithium effect on testicular tissue and spermatozoa of viscacha (Lagostomus maximus maximus). A comparative study with rats. 1094 17

In order to explore the impact of surgical treatment on antioxidant defense system in varicocele (VAR), we evaluated seminal total antioxidant capacity (TAC) in 25 patients affected by VAR, in 14 patients studied 10-24 months after varicocelectomy (post-VAR) and separated into normo- and oligospermic groups, and in 24 non-VAR control patients with seminal parameters matched to patients with VAR in the oligo- and normospermic groups (7 subjects with idiopathic oligospermia and 17 normal fertile subjects). TAC was measured in seminal plasma with the system H(2)O(2)-metamyoglobin as a source of radicals, which interact with a chromogen 2,2',-azinobis (3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulphonate) (ABTS), generating a radical cation spectroscopically detectable. The presence of antioxidants induces a lag time in the production of ABTS cation proportional to the concentration of antioxidant compounds. When whole groups of patients were analyzed, lag values were significantly higher in VAR vs non-VAR controls (mean +/- SEM, 106.6 +/- 8.8 seconds vs 78.7 +/- 8.8 seconds) but were not modified by surgery (mean +/- SEM, 105.8 +/- 8.6 seconds). In groups separated according to seminal parameters, oligospermic VAR presented significantly higher lag values than oligospermic controls. Finally, when exploring a possible association of TAC with seminal parameters, we found a significant correlation between lag and sperm motility only in patients with VAR who were in the normospermic group (r = 0.65, P <.01). This correlation was not yet manifest post-VAR. In conclusion, surgical treatment does not seem to modify absolute values of TAC but influences its fine regulation and relationships with sperm motility.
...
PMID:Seminal antioxidant capacity in pre- and postoperative varicocele. 1466 85