A method to evaluate dynamics and periodicity of hormone secretion.

J Biol Regul Homeost Agents

Department of Internal Medicine and Chronobiology Unit, Scientific Institute and Regional General Hospital, Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza, S. Giovanni Rotondo (FG), Italy.

Published: September 2011

Spontaneous hormone secretory dynamics include tonic and pulsatile components and a number of periodic processes. Circadian variations are usually found for melatonin, TSH and GH, with peak secretions at night, and in cortisol secretion, which peaks in the morning. Free thyroxine (FT4) and insulin-like growth factor (IGF)1 levels do not always change with circadian rhythmicity or show only minor fluctuations. Fractional variations explore the dynamics of secretion related to time intervals, and the rate of change in serum levels represents a signal for the receptorial system and the target organ. We evaluated time-related variations and change dynamics for melatonin, cortisol, TSH, FT4, GH and IGF1 levels in blood samples obtained every 4 h for 24 h from eleven healthy males, ages 35-53 years (mean ∓ SE 43.6 ± 1.7). Nyctohemeral (i.e., day-night) patterns of hormone secretion levels and the fractional rate of variation between consecutive 4-hourly time-qualified hormone serum levels (calculated as percent change from time 1 to time 2) were evaluated for circadian periodicity using a 24 and 12-h cosine model. A circadian rhythm was validated for serum level changes in cortisol with peaks of the 24-h cosine model at 07:48 h, and melatonin, TSH and GH, with phases at 01:35 h, 23:32 h, and 00:00 h, respectively. A weak, but significant, 12-h periodicity was found for FT4 serum levels, with minor peaks in the morning (10:00 h) and evening (22:00 h), and for IGF1, with minor peaks in the morning (07:40 h) and evening (19:40 h). Circadian rhythmicity was found in the 4-hourly fractional variations with phases of increase or surge at 02:00 h for cortisol, 22:29 h for melatonin, 05:14 h for FT4, and 21:19 h for GH. A significant 12-h periodicity was found for the 4-hourly fractional variations of TSH with two peaks in the morning (decrease or drop at 04:42 h) and afternoon (surge at 16:28 h), whereas IGF1 fractional variation changes did not show a significant rhythmic pattern. In conclusion, the calculation of the time-qualified fractional rate of variation allows evaluation of the dynamics of secretion and the specification of the timepoint(s) of maximal change of secretion, not only for hormones whose secretion is characterized by a circadian pattern of variation, but also for hormones that show no circadian or only weak ultradian (12 h) variations (i.e., FT4).

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

peaks morning
16
fractional variations
12
serum levels
12
hormone secretion
8
melatonin tsh
8
igf1 levels
8
circadian rhythmicity
8
dynamics secretion
8
fractional rate
8
rate variation
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!