To investigate the pathophysiology of altered growth hormone (GH) and prolactin secretion in endstage renal disease, we sampled blood at 10-min intervals for 24 h and applied deconvolution analysis to calculate hormone half-lives and pulsatile secretion rates. Two-site immunoradiometric assays were employed to quantitate presumptively intact GH and prolactin in nine middle-aged men with chronic renal failure and 14 gender-, age-, body weight- and community-matched controls. We observed that the half-lives of endogenous GH and prolactin were prolonged significantly in uremia: for GH, control 17 +/- 1.4 versus uremia 21 +/- 1.3 min (p < 0.05); for prolactin, control 66 +/- 9.3 versus uremia 112 +/- 10 min (p < 0.01). Daily GH secretion rates exceeded sex-, age- and weight-predicted values in eight of nine uremic individuals, while values for prolactin were variable but on average twofold higher in uremia. In both the somatotropic and lactotropic axes, the frequency of secretory bursts was increased significantly (for GH, control 11 +/- 1.1 versus uremia 15 +/- 0.84 secretory events/24 h: for prolactin, control 20 +/- 0.90 versus uremia 27 +/- 1.3 pulses/24 h, p < 0.05). Although there were no significant alterations in the mean amplitude, duration or mass of GH secretory bursts, prolactin secretory burst amplitudes were elevated threefold in uremia (p < 0.01). These distinctive mechanisms brought about higher 24-h mean serum concentrations of GH (0.70 +/- 0.17 control versus 1.22 +/- 0.32 micrograms/l uremia) and prolactin (7.3 +/- 2.4 control versus 26 +/- 6.1 micrograms/l uremia, p < 0.05). Lastly, serum concentrations of estradiol were increased but those of unconjugated estriol decreased in uremia. We conclude that hypersomatotropinemia and hyperprolactinemia in uremic men result from prolonged hormone half-lives combined with increased frequencies of secretory events driven by unknown stimuli within the respective axes, and/or by defects in their negative-feedback regulation. We postulate that the latter may arise from partial tissue resistance to hormone action in hemodialyzed men.
Color Doppler US is more sensitive than clinical or laboratory methods for detection of hemodialysis access stenosis. Screening with US appears to enable earlier detection and therapy.
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