Browsing by Author "BRANDEIS, A"
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- ItemA STUDY ON THE FEASIBILITY OF SUPPRESSING OVARIAN ACTIVITY FOLLOWING THE END OF POSTPARTUM AMENORRHEA BY INCREASING THE FREQUENCY OF SUCKLING(1988) DIAZ, S; MIRANDA, P; BRANDEIS, A; CARDENAS, H; CROXATTO, HBThe aim of the study was to test the effect of increasing the frequency of breastfeeding upon ovarian function following the end of postpartum amenorrhoea. Women exclusively breastfeeding (n = 14) who experienced their first postpartum menstruation between the third and fifth month after delivery were randomly allocated to an experimental (n = 7) and a control (n = 7) group and studied during the next two cycles. Women in the experimental group agreed to increase the number of breastfeeding episodes per day throughout the second cycle. Blood samples were drawn twice a week from the first to the third postpartum menstruation for prolactin, oestradiol and progesterone determinations. The number of breastfeeding episodes per day and night and the length of each episode were recorded daily. An average frequency of 11 nursing episodes per 24 h was reported during the first study cycle in both groups. The experimental group increased by 50% of the breastfeeding frequency after the second menstruation while the control group kept its spontaneous feeding pattern. The increase of suckling frequency occurred mainly during day hours. The total breastfeeding time per 24 h was not increased. The length of the menstrual cycle was not altered by the increased suckling frequency. The endocrine pattern differed neither between the first and second cycle of the experimental group nor between the experimental and control group, with the exception of PRL levels which were higher in the experimental gorup throughout both cycles. Twenty cycles (71%) showed progesterone values compatible with ovulation (> 9.5 nmol/l). The highest progesterone values and the highest oestradiol values observed in the ovulatory cycles of lactating women were within the range found in non-nursing fertile women. Plasma levels of PRL were significantly elevated in all cycles but one, in comparison with PRL levels in non-nursing women. It is concluded that if cyclic ovarian function is reestablished early in fully nursing women, a mere increase in the number of breastfeeding episodes, without augmenting total suckling time and the frequency of nocturnal episodes, does not provide a sufficient stimulus to resuppress the pituitary-ovarian axis.
- ItemCIRCADIAN VARIATION OF BASAL PLASMA PROLACTIN, PROLACTIN RESPONSE TO SUCKLING, AND LENGTH OF AMENORRHEA IN NURSING WOMEN(1989) DIAZ, S; SERONFERRE, M; CARDENAS, H; SCHIAPPACASSE, V; BRANDEIS, A; CROXATTO, HBThe circadian pattern of plasma PRL levels and the PRL response to suckling were examined at various times during the first postpartum year and related to the length of lactational amenorrhea. Ten healthy women whose infants were breast-fed exclusively and who were amenorrheic 3 months postpartum were studied 3, 6, and 9-11 months postpartum. The women and their babies were admitted to a metabolic unit for 48 h. On the second day, blood samples were drawn at 2-h intervals for 26 h starting at 0800 h and also 10 and 30 min after the initiation of six of the nursing episodes. During the three postpartum periods, there was a circadian rhythm of basal plasma PRL concentrations; the peak concentrations occurred between 2400-0600 h. Suckling induced a significant rise in plasma PRL levels at all hours except 0800 h. There was a positive correlation between the duration of the nursing episode and the suckling-induced PRL increase at 30 min. Both the basal plasma PRL levels and the PRL responses to suckling diminished with time after delivery. This trend was less evident at 0400 h and was not fully explained by changes in the nursing pattern. The five women in whom menstrual cycles resumed before day 180 postpartum had lower basal and suckling-induced plasma PRL levels than in the women who had amenorrhea for a longer period. This difference was present in the third month, when all women were amenorrheic and fully nursing and when the frequency and duration of nursing episodes and infant growth rates were similar. The results indicate that comparable nursing patterns may be associated with different plasma PRL levels, which are associated with different lengths of lactational amenorrhea. An early difference in the sensitivity of the breast-hypothalamus-pituitary system to suckling may explain the differences in the duration of lactational amenorrhea, which are not dependent on the breastfeeding pattern. The magnitude of the PRL response to suckling may predict the likelihood of recovering ovarian function during lactation.
- ItemLUTEINIZING-HORMONE PULSATILE RELEASE AND THE LENGTH OF LACTATIONAL AMENORRHEA(1995) DIAZ, S; CARDENAS, H; ZEPEDA, A; BRANDEIS, A; SCHIAPPACASSE, V; MIRANDA, P; SERONFERRE, M; CROXATTO, HBThe pattern of luteinizing hormone (LH) pulsatile release and the mean concentrations of follicle-stimulating hormone, oestradiol and progesterone were studied in nursing and non-nursing women. Blood samples were drawn at 5 min intervals between 10:00 and 14:00 h and between 22:00 and 02:00 h at months 3-4, 5-6, 7-8 and 9-10 post-partum in nursing women and in the follicular phase in non-nursing women. In nursing women, mean LH concentrations at months 3-4 were significantly lower than in non-nursing cycling women only in the subgroup which subsequently experienced >6 months of lactational amenorrhoea, although all were fully nursing with a similar suckling frequency. LH pulses in plasma were found at all times in nursing women. There were no significant differences in the frequency (about four pulses every 4 h), amplitude or duration of LH pulses related to the duration of amenorrhoea, nor did these parameters vary significantly between amenorrhoeic or cycling nursing women and nonnursing women. Nursing amenorrhoeic women exhibited a normal frequency of LH pulse well in advance of the resumption of the first post-partum menses, suggesting that mechanisms other than the suppression of the gonadotrophin-releasing hormone pulse generator intervened in the inhibition of ovarian function during lactation.
- ItemRELATIVE CONTRIBUTIONS OF ANOVULATION AND LUTEAL PHASE DEFECT TO THE REDUCED PREGNANCY RATE OF BREAST-FEEDING WOMEN(1992) DIAZ, S; CARDENAS, H; BRANDEIS, A; MIRANDA, P; SALVATIERRA, AM; CROXATTO, HBObjective: To evaluate the contribution of anovulation and luteal phase defects to lactational infertility.