Abstract

BackgroundThe role of estrogens in male physiology has become evident. However, clinically useful normative data for estradiol secretion in boys has not previously been established due to the insensitivity of current methods used in clinical routine. By use of a validated ultra-sensitive extraction RIA, our aim was to establish normative data from a group consisting of healthy boys in prepuberty and during pubertal development.MethodsSixty-two 24-hours serum profiles (6 samples/24 hours) were obtained from 44 healthy boys (ages; 7.2–18.6 years) during their pubertal development, classified into five stages: prepuberty (testis, 1–2 mL), early (testis, 3–6 mL), mid (testis, 8–12 mL), late-1 (testis,15–25 mL, not reached final height) and late-2 (testis,15–25 mL, reached final height). Serum estradiol was determined by an ultra- sensitive extraction radioimmunoassay with detection limit 4 pmol/L and functional sensitivity 6 pmol/L.ResultsMean estradiol concentrations during 24-hours secretion increased from prepuberty (median: <4 (5–95 percentiles: <4 – 7) pmol/L) to early puberty (6 (<4 – 12 pmol/L) but then remained relatively constant until a marked increase between mid-puberty (8 (4 – 17) pmol/L) and late-1 (21 (12 – 37) pmol/L) puberty, followed by a slower increase until late-2 puberty (32 (20 – 47) pmol/L). The diurnal rhythm of serum estradiol was non-measurable in pre- and early puberty, but discerned in mid-puberty, and become evident in late pubertal stages with peak values at 0600 to 1000 h.ConclusionWith the use of an ultra-sensitive extraction RIA, we have provided clinically useful normative data for estradiol secretion in boys.

Highlights

  • The role of estrogens in male physiology has become evident

  • The increase was significant from prepuberty to early puberty (p < 0.01), from mid to late-1 puberty (p < 0.05) and from late-1 to late-2 puberty (p < 0.05)

  • Statistical analysis showed significantly higher estradiol concentrations at 0600 h compared to 1000 1800 h and 0200 h (Table 1, Figure 2B)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The role of estrogens in male physiology has become evident. clinically useful normative data for estradiol secretion in boys has not previously been established due to the insensitivity of current methods used in clinical routine. Apart from normal physiology processes involving the reproductive system, growth spurt, epiphyseal closure and bone mineralization [1,2,3], estrogen has been suggested to have a role in pathological processes in male infertility in obesity [4] and cardiovascular diseases [5]. To study these conditions in boys and to be able to mimic physiological concentrations during estrogen, androgen or aromatase (page number not for citation purposes). Assays that utilize an organic solvent extraction step to remove interfering substances, such as non-specific-bindings and binding globulins, have been shown to give lower values which more resemble values measured by MS-based methods [12,13]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.