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International Journal of Occupational... Jun 2021Epidemiological observations indicate that female flight attendants are exposed to some reproductive and endocrine system disturbances. The aim of the study was to...
OBJECTIVES
Epidemiological observations indicate that female flight attendants are exposed to some reproductive and endocrine system disturbances. The aim of the study was to determine the incidence of hyperprolactinemia among female flight attendants, and to identify factors affecting the secretion of prolactin in female flight attendants working within 1 time zone as well as on long-distance flights.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
The cross-sectional study covered 103 women aged 23-46 years. The study group (I) was divided into 2 subgroups: subgroup Ia comprising female flight attendants flying within 1 flight zone, and subgroup Ib composed of female flight attendants working on long-distance flights. The control group (II) included women of reproductive age who sought medical assistance due to marital infertility in whom the male factor was found to be responsible for problems with conception in the course of the diagnostic process. The assessment included: age, the body mass index, menstrual cycle regularity, the length of service, the frequency of flying, the prolactin, estradiol and progesterone concentrations, and the result of endometrial biopsy. Descriptive and inferential statistics methods were used to compile the data.
RESULTS
The incidence of hyperprolactinemia in the female flight attendants (46%) was significantly higher than in the control group (9%), p < 0.001. Differences between subgroups Ia and Ib regarding individual concentrations were not statistically significant (p = 0.425). Hyperprolactinemia among the female flight attendants working ≥15 years is present slightly more often than in those working <15 years: 46% vs. 45% (p > 0.05). No significant difference was revealed in the secretion of prolactin between the study participants spending <60 h/month flying and those spending ≥60 h/month flying (p > 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
Hyperprolactinemia is more common in female flight attendants than in the general population. High values of prolactin concentration in flight attendants are rarely manifested in clinical symptoms. The frequency of flying and the length of service do not affect the development of hyperprolactinemia or the mean prolactin concentration. Int J Occup Med Environ Health. 2021;34(3):351-61.
Topics: Adult; Cross-Sectional Studies; Female; Humans; Incidence; Male; Middle Aged; Prolactin; Young Adult
PubMed: 33331302
DOI: 10.13075/ijomeh.1896.01655 -
Current Problems in Cardiology Feb 2023Heart failure (HF) is one of the leading causes of maternal mortality and morbidity in the United States. Peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) constitutes up to 70% of all... (Meta-Analysis)
Meta-Analysis Review
Heart failure (HF) is one of the leading causes of maternal mortality and morbidity in the United States. Peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) constitutes up to 70% of all HF in pregnancy. Cardiac angiogenic imbalance caused by cleaved 16kDa prolactin has been hypothesized to contribute to the development of PPCM, fueling investigation of prolactin inhibitors for the management of PPCM. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the impact of prolactin inhibition on left ventricular (LV) function and mortality in patients with PPCM. We included English language articles from PubMed and EMBASE published upto March 2022. We pooled the mean difference (MD) for left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) at follow-up, odds ratio (OR) for LV recovery and risk ratio (RR) for all-cause mortality using random-effects meta-analysis. Among 548 studies screened, 10 studies (3 randomized control trials (RCTs), 2 retrospective and 5 prospective cohorts) were included in the systematic review. Patients in the Bromocriptine + standard guideline directed medical therapy (GDMT) group had higher LVEF% (pMD 12.56 (95% CI 5.84-19.28, I2=0%) from two cohorts and pMD 14.25 (95% CI 0.61-27.89, I2=88%) from two RCTs) at follow-up compared to standard GDMT alone group. Bromocriptine group also had higher odds of LV recovery (pOR 3.55 (95% CI 1.39-9.1, I2=62)). We did not find any difference in all-cause mortality between the groups. Our analysis demonstrates that the addition of Bromocriptine to standard GDMT was associated with a significant improvement in LVEF% and greater odds of LV recovery, without significant reduction in all-cause mortality.
Topics: Pregnancy; Female; Humans; Bromocriptine; Prolactin; Peripartum Period; Cardiomyopathies; Ventricular Function, Left; Heart Failure; Stroke Volume; Pregnancy Complications, Cardiovascular
PubMed: 36261102
DOI: 10.1016/j.cpcardiol.2022.101461 -
Journal of Psychiatric Research Sep 2020Early studies reported a prolactin surge during electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). The aim of this study is to review and meta-analyze data on ECT-related prolactin... (Meta-Analysis)
Meta-Analysis Review
BACKGROUND
Early studies reported a prolactin surge during electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). The aim of this study is to review and meta-analyze data on ECT-related prolactin changes.
METHOD
A systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted for trials investigating prolactin changes in ECT-treated patients using standard mean differences (SMD, 95% confidence intervals). Subgroup analyses included comparisons of ECT-related prolactin changes in women vs. men, patients receiving different anesthetics, bilateral vs. unilateral and high-vs. low-dose ECT.
RESULTS
In six trials including 109 ECT-treated patients and 74 controls, prolactin changes were larger in ECT-treated patients than in controls (SMD = 0.89, 95%CI = 0.55, 1.23, p < 0.001 and 1.03, 95%CI = 0.31, 1.75, p = 0.005 for the fixed and random-effect model respectively), despite heterogeneity in the samples (I = 72%, τ = 0.62). Effects were led by differences in patients premedicated with methohexital (SMD = 1.14, 95%CI = 0.7, 1.57, p < 0.001 for both fixed and random-effect model). A meta-regression reported significant age effects (coefficient estimate 2.32, 95%CI = -0.73, 3.91, p < 0.01). Additionally, prolactin changes were larger in ECT-treated women than men (SMD = 0.88, 95%CI = 0.58, 1.18, p < 0.001 and 0.99, 95%CI = 0.22, 1.75, p = 0.012 for the fixed and random effect model). Bilateral ECT-treated patients had larger increase than unilateral ECT-treated patients (SMD = -0.81, 95%CI = -1.35, -0.27, p = 0.003 and -0.86, 95%CI = -1.46, -0.25, p = 0.006 for the fixed and random-effect model). Comparisons between high- and low-dose ECT-treated patients could not be conducted. The quality of the studies was overall poor, with four exceptions.
DISCUSSION
Patients receiving ECT had larger prolactin increases than controls. Increases were larger in methohexital-premedicated patients, women vs. men and patients with bilateral vs. unilateral ECT.
Topics: Electroconvulsive Therapy; Female; Humans; Male; Prolactin
PubMed: 32516627
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2020.05.024 -
Frontiers in Endocrinology 2021Vasoinhibin is a protein hormone with antiangiogenic, antivasodilatatory, and antivasopermeability effects generated by the proteolytic cleavage of prolactin. The...
Vasoinhibin is a protein hormone with antiangiogenic, antivasodilatatory, and antivasopermeability effects generated by the proteolytic cleavage of prolactin. The discovery of its role in diabetic retinopathy and peripartum cardiomyopathy led to the evaluation of new pharmacological treatments in clinical interventional trials. However, the quantitative evaluation of vasoinhibin in biological samples from patients has not been possible due to the lack of vasoinhibin-specific antibodies. Recently, loop 1 of vasoinhibin was identified to have a different three-dimensional structure compared to PRL, and thus to contain vasoinhibin-specific epitopes. Here, we report the development of two sets of vasoinhibin-specific monoclonal antibodies against two neighboring regions of the vasoinhibin loop 1. An experimental sandwich ELISA with two monoclonal anti-vasoinhibin antibodies was developed, which had no cross-reactivity to recombinant human full-length prolactin. The ELISA had a quantitation limit of 100 ng/ml, and intra-assay- and inter-assay coefficients of variation of 12.5% and 14%, respectively. The evaluation of 15 human serum samples demonstrated concentrations of below limit of detection (n=3), below limit of quantitation (n=1) and between 0.23 µg/ml (230 ng/ml) to 605 µg/ml (n=12) in the quantifiable range. Despite the high specificity of the monoclonal-monoclonal antibody sandwiches which discriminate vasoinhibin from PRL, there might be cross-reactivities by serum proteins other than vasoinhibin. A fully established vasoinhibin ELISA may support diagnostic and therapeutic measures in vascular diseases.
Topics: Angiogenesis Inhibitors; Antibodies, Monoclonal; Cell Cycle Proteins; Diabetic Retinopathy; Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay; Humans; Limit of Detection; Molecular Conformation; Prolactin; Proteolysis; Recombinant Proteins; Sensitivity and Specificity
PubMed: 33959096
DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.645085 -
Experimental Eye Research Dec 2022The purpose of the study was to investigate the role of Prolactin-Induced Protein (PIP) in corneal wound healing, in vivo and in vitro. In C57BL/6J mice, corneal...
The purpose of the study was to investigate the role of Prolactin-Induced Protein (PIP) in corneal wound healing, in vivo and in vitro. In C57BL/6J mice, corneal epithelia was removed using an ocular burr. Phosphate buffered saline (PBS) or PIP (0.5 and 1.0 μg/mL) was applied topically or subconjunctivally injected. PIP accelerated wound closure as early as 24 h. PIP treatment promoted corneal wound healing and epithelial integrity and thickness. Integrin α6, integrin β4, Thrombospondin-1, and TGF-β1 expressions were all downregulated by PIP after wound closure. In vitro, scratch assays were performed using primary human epithelial cells (HCECs) and human corneal fibroblasts (HCFs), stimulated with PIP at various dosages. PIP treatment promoted both HCECs and HCFs migration. PIP upregulated expression of integrin α6, integrin β4, and Thrombospondin-1 in HCECs. Expression of TGF-β1 in HCECs and expression of smooth muscle actin (SMA) and Type III Collagen (Col III) in HCFs were significantly downregulated at 150 ng/mL PIP. PIP exhibits noteworthy anti-fibrotic potentiality. While the mechanism of how PIP is impactful on the corneal wound healing cascade is unknown, our findings are novel and further studies are warranted in order to unravel any therapeutic potential.
Topics: Mice; Animals; Humans; Transforming Growth Factor beta1; Prolactin; Integrin alpha6; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Wound Healing; Corneal Injuries; Thrombospondins
PubMed: 36328302
DOI: 10.1016/j.exer.2022.109300 -
Endocrine Aug 2023To clarify the relationship between one the most gender-specific hormone, i.e. prolactin (PRL), and semen parameters in men.
PURPOSE
To clarify the relationship between one the most gender-specific hormone, i.e. prolactin (PRL), and semen parameters in men.
METHODS
A retrospective, observational, cohort, real-world study was carried out, enrolling all men performing a semen analysis and PRL examination from 2010 to 2022. For each patient, the first semen analys was extracted, associated to PRL, total testosterone (TT), follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH). Hyperprolactinaemia (>35 ng/mL) was excluded.
RESULTS
1211 subjects were included. PRL serum levels were lower in normozoospermia compared to azoospermia (p = 0.002) and altered semen parameters (p = 0.048) groups. TT serum levels were not different among groups (p = 0.122). Excluding azoospermic men, PRL serum levels were lower in normozoospermic patients, when compared to other groups of semen alterations. An inverse correlation was detected between PRL and sperm concentration. Considering normozospermic subjects, PRL was directly related to both non-progressive sperm motility (p = 0.014) and normal sperm morphology (p = 0.040). Subdiving the cohort in quartiles according to PRL distribution, the highest motilities were observed in the second PRL quartile (8.30-11.10 ng/mL) and asthenozoospermia was significantly predicted by FSH (p < 0.001) and second PRL quartile (p = 0.045).
CONCLUSION
The PRL-spermatogenesis connection seems to be mild, although low-normal PRL levels are associated with the best spermatogenetic profile. PRL serum levels could mirror the immunoregulatory status within the testis, suggesting that there is a sort of 'PRL optimal window' reflecting an efficent spermatogenesis. Alternatively, men with good semen parameters might have a higher central dopaminergic tone resulting in low PRL levels.
Topics: Humans; Male; Retrospective Studies; Cohort Studies; Prolactin; Spermatogenesis; Semen
PubMed: 37140814
DOI: 10.1007/s12020-023-03375-x -
Clinical Laboratory Jul 2021Macroprolactinemia is a common presentation especially in gynecology and fertility clinics. However, with this clinical condition, there is a potential for misdiagnosis...
BACKGROUND
Macroprolactinemia is a common presentation especially in gynecology and fertility clinics. However, with this clinical condition, there is a potential for misdiagnosis and unnecessary investigations/treatments due to lack of awareness of its prevalence and diagnostic approaches amongst trainees and physicians.
METHODS
In this paper, we discuss the causes of hyperprolactinemia, its pathobiology, and an approach to macro-prolactinemia including relevant clinical chemistry methods and their limitations through the case of a 45-year-old female with a history of irregular menstrual cycles, who was seen in the endocrine clinic.
RESULTS
Patient did not have a history of infertility, galactorrhea, visual-disturbance, or headaches. Her physical examination and routine clinical chemistry investigations were unremarkable. Her initial prolactin level was 4,836 mIU/L (109 - 557) with subsequent results demonstrating diminishing levels of prolactin a month apart (1,023 mIU/L). Polyethylene glycol (PEG) precipitation test demonstrated the presence of macroprolactin with a 3% post-PEG recovery of prolactin and 111 mIU/L post-PEG prolactin concentration.
CONCLUSIONS
Patient's post-PRL results and clinical course confirmed the presence of macroprolactin to be the cause of factitious hyperprolactinemia. A sound approach to macroprolactinemia is critical in clinical and laboratory practices.
Topics: Amenorrhea; Female; Galactorrhea; Humans; Hyperprolactinemia; Middle Aged; Pregnancy; Prolactin
PubMed: 34258986
DOI: 10.7754/Clin.Lab.2020.201108 -
General and Comparative Endocrinology Jan 2022During breeding, multiple circulating hormones, including prolactin, facilitate reproductive transitions in species that exhibit parental care. Prolactin underlies...
During breeding, multiple circulating hormones, including prolactin, facilitate reproductive transitions in species that exhibit parental care. Prolactin underlies parental behaviors and related physiological changes across many vertebrates, including birds and mammals. While circulating prolactin levels often fluctuate across breeding, less is known about how relevant target tissues vary in their prolactin responsiveness via prolactin receptor (PRLR) expression. Recent studies have also investigated prolactin (PRL) gene expression outside of the pituitary (i.e., extra-pituitary PRL), but how PRL gene expression varies during parental care in non-pituitary tissue (e.g., hypothalamus, gonads) remains largely unknown. Further, it is unclear if and how tissue-specific PRL and PRLR vary between the sexes during biparental care. To address this, we measured PRL and PRLR gene expression in tissues relevant to parental care, the endocrine reproductive hypothalamic-pituitary- gonadal (HPG) axis and the crop (a tissue with a similar function as the mammalian mammary gland), across various reproductive stages in both sexes of a biparental bird, the rock dove (Columba livia). We also assessed how these genes responded to changes in offspring presence by adding chicks mid-incubation, simulating an early hatch when prolactin levels were still moderately low. We found that pituitary PRL expression showed similar increases as plasma prolactin levels, and detected extra-pituitary PRL in the hypothalamus, gonads and crop. Hypothalamic and gonadal PRLR expression also changed as birds began incubation. Crop PRLR expression correlated with plasma prolactin, peaking when chicks hatched. In response to replacing eggs with a novel chick mid-incubation, hypothalamic and gonadal PRL and PRLR gene expression differed significantly compared to mid-incubation controls, even when plasma prolactin levels did not differ. We also found sex differences in PRL and PRLR that suggest gene expression may allow males to compensate for lower levels in prolactin by upregulating PRLR in all tissues. Overall, this study advances our understanding of how tissue-specific changes in responsiveness to parental hormones may differ across key reproductive transitions, in response to offspring cues, and between the sexes.
Topics: Animals; Columbidae; Crop, Avian; Female; Gene Expression; Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System; Male; Pituitary Gland; Pituitary-Adrenal System; Prolactin; Receptors, Prolactin
PubMed: 34756919
DOI: 10.1016/j.ygcen.2021.113940 -
Life Sciences Dec 2020Brain injuries based on their causes are divided into two categories, TBI and NTBI. TBI is caused by damages such as head injury, but non-physical injury causes NTBI.... (Review)
Review
AIMS
Brain injuries based on their causes are divided into two categories, TBI and NTBI. TBI is caused by damages such as head injury, but non-physical injury causes NTBI. Prolactin is one of the blood factors that increase during brain injury. It has been assumed to play a regenerative role in post-injury recovery.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
In this review, various valid papers from electronic sources (including Web of Science, Scopus, PubMed, SID, Google Scholar, and ISI databases) used, which in them the protective effect of prolactin on brain injury investigated.
KEY FINDINGS
Inflammation following brain injury with the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines in the affected area can even lead to excitotoxicity and cell death in the damaged area. Medical brain damage treatments are long-term, and can have several side effects. Therefore, it is better to consider medication treatments that have fewer side effects and greater efficacy. Research suggests that prolactin has numerous regenerative effects on brain injury, and prevents cell death. Prolactin is one of the hormones produced in the body; therefore it has fewer side effects and may be more effective because it increases during brain injury.
SIGNIFICANCE
Prolactin can be used peripherally and centrally, and exerts its neuro regenerative effects against further damage post-TBI and NTBI.
Topics: Animals; Brain Injuries; Cytokines; Humans; Inflammation; Prolactin
PubMed: 33038380
DOI: 10.1016/j.lfs.2020.118547 -
American Journal of Physiology.... Jun 2022Prolactin (PRL) cells within the (RPD) of euryhaline and eurythermal Mozambique tilapia, , rapidly respond to a hyposmotic stimulus by releasing two distinct PRL...
Prolactin (PRL) cells within the (RPD) of euryhaline and eurythermal Mozambique tilapia, , rapidly respond to a hyposmotic stimulus by releasing two distinct PRL isoforms, PRL and PRL. Here, we describe how environmentally relevant temperature changes affected mRNA levels of and and the release of immunoreactive prolactins from RPDs and dispersed PRL cells. When applied under isosmotic conditions (330 mosmol/kgHO), a 6°C rise in temperature stimulated the release of PRL and PRL from both RPDs and dispersed PRL cells under perifusion. When exposed to this same change in temperature, ∼50% of dispersed PRL cells gradually increased in volume by ∼8%, a response partially inhibited by the water channel blocker, mercuric chloride. Following their response to increased temperature, PRL cells remained responsive to a hyposmotic stimulus (280 mosmol/kgHO). The mRNA expression of , a Ca-channel involved in hyposmotically induced PRL release, was elevated in response to a rise in temperature in dispersed PRL cells and RPDs at 6 and 24 h, respectively; and mRNAs were unaffected. Our findings indicate that thermosensitive PRL release is mediated, at least partially, through a cell-volume-dependent pathway similar to how osmoreceptive PRL release is achieved.
Topics: Animals; Cell Size; Pituitary Gland; Prolactin; RNA, Messenger; Tilapia; Water
PubMed: 35438003
DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.00027.2022