1. Evaluation of sex hormone profile and semen parameters in acromegalic male patients.
- Author
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Yilmaz MK, Sulu C, Ozkaya HM, Kadioglu A, Ortac M, and Kadioglu P
- Subjects
- Genetic Fitness physiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Acuity, Pituitary Diseases diagnosis, Pituitary Diseases etiology, Pituitary Diseases metabolism, Remission Induction, Turkey epidemiology, Acromegaly diagnosis, Acromegaly epidemiology, Acromegaly metabolism, Acromegaly physiopathology, Growth Hormone analysis, Growth Hormone biosynthesis, Growth Hormone blood, Pituitary Neoplasms diagnosis, Pituitary Neoplasms metabolism, Semen Analysis methods, Testosterone analysis, Testosterone blood
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate the changes in semen quality and bioavailable testosterone concentrations in acromegalic male patients according to their disease activity and compare them with patients with non-functional pituitary adenoma (NFA) and healthy controls (HC)., Methods: Twenty-four acromegalic patients with active disease, 22 acromegalic patients in remission, 10 HCs, and 10 patients with NFA were included., Results: Total and calculated bioavailable testosterone concentrations were lower in patients with pituitary disease. Patients with acromegaly had more severely impaired total testosterone levels and semen parameters in comparison to HCs and patients with NFA. The degree of impairment was more prominent in acromegalic patients with active disease than acromegalic patients in remission. Acromegalic patients in remission had residual impairments in both semen quality and testosterone concentrations. Patients with NFA had the lowest concentrations of calculated bioavailable testosterone, followed by acromegalic patients with active disease and acromegalic patients in remission. Increasing growth hormone (GH) levels were found to be associated with both more severely impaired semen quality and androgen concentrations., Conclusion: Growth hormone hypersecretion can disturb reproductive biology and thereof semen quality. The reduction in semen quality and androgen levels may not fully recover upon disease control. Clinicians should be aware of the increased risk of impaired semen parameters and reduced total/bioavailable levels in acromegalic patients, especially in the setting of active disease., (© 2021. Italian Society of Endocrinology (SIE).)
- Published
- 2021
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