
Prolactin |
89 Prolactin is secreted by the anterior pituitary gland and induces lactation. Normally, prolactin is secreted in a pulsatile, sleep dependent rhythm with highest levels occurring during sleep and lowest levels occurring a few hours after waking. Prolactin secretion by the pituitary gland is under tonic inhibition from the hypothalamus via dopamine. Any lesion of the pituitary stalk prevents tonic inhibition and allows prolactin levels to rise. Prolactin concentrations normally rise with illness and physical stress. If pharmacologic doses of thyrotrophin releasing hormone (TRH) are administered, prolactin concentrations can increase. Prolactin measurements are most commonly carried out in the evaluation of reproductive disorders, often infertility, in either men or women and in the assessment of global anterior pituitary function. For example, if there is destruction of the hypothalamic-pituitary-portal system by trauma, tumor, inflammation, irradiation or hemorrhage, in the absence of sufficient concentrations of PRIH, prolactin levels rise. Hyperprolactinemia can pathologically cause galactorrhea in men and in women in the absence of a recent delivery. Other symptoms include: Women Oligomenorrhea Amenorrhea Infertility Men Loss of libido Impotence Infertility The differential diagnosis of hyperprolactinemia includes the following:
The best approach to diagnose prolactinoma includes pituitary imaging and prolactin measurement. Prolactin levels greater than 100 ng/ml are diagnostic of prolactinoma. Patients with macroadenomas generally have prolactin levels exceeding 250 ng/mL. Patients with serum prolactin levels of more than 200 pg/mL have a smaller chance of surgical cure. Secondary causes of hyperprolactinemia should be excluded by a thorough history, physical examination and appropriate laboratory studies (e.g., creatinine, BUN, urinalysis, ALT and TSH). Elevated prolactin levels are frequently seen in women with the amenorrhea galactorrhea syndrome. Some men with gynecomastia and 15 20% of women with amenorrhea have elevated prolactin levels. Prolactin levels are usually below 50 ng/mL. Exercise, nipple manipulation, surgery, hypoglycemia, stress and uremia may transiently increase prolactin levels. Prolactin levels increase gradually during pregnancy to a level approximately 20 times baseline. Some drugs may increase prolactin levels, usually between 20 and 100 ng/mL. The most common examples are;
Macroprolactinemia should be considered, especially if hyperprolactinemia is identified in an individual who lacks any of the typical manifestations of hyperprolactinemia. Between 10 and 20% of samples with elevated prolactin contain macroprolactin. In contrast, about 2% of individuals in an unselected population have an elevated prolactin concentration due to macroprolactin. Current scientific evidence indicates that macroprolactin is biologically inactive. Laboratory prolactin assays vary in their reactivity to macroprolactin, but all currently available assays will detect macroprolactin to some extent. Studies in which samples containing macroprolactin have been tested by multiple assays have shown that methods can be roughly categorized into low, medium and high reactivity groups. Classification of Prolactin Assays by Reactivity to Macroprolactin
Most hospital laboratories do not test for macroprolactin. Specimens can be sent to a reference laboratory, which may use one of three methods. The best available method for measuring macroprolactin is gel filtration chromatography. The advantages of this method are that it has been validated in many studies and it provides quantitative results.Centrifugal ultrafiltration using a Centricon 100 concentrator with a 100 kDa molecular weight cutoff has also been described. This is a relatively simple method, but it requires long centrifugation times at low temperature (five hours at 15 degrees C). The most common method used to detect macroprolactin is treatment of the patient serum sample with polyethylene glycol (PEG). Addition of PEG to patient serum samples precipitates much of the higher molecular weight forms of prolactin leaving the lower molecular weight forms of prolactin in the serum specimen. The PEG-treated sample or ultrafiltrate may be retested, and the residual prolactin activity or recovery can be calculated. A low recovery after treatment indicates that macroprolactin is likely to be present. PEG treatment has the advantage of being quick and simple to perform, it requires little in the way of extra equipment, and it is well validated in the literature. The disadvantage of PEG precipitation is that it is not quantitative and it interferes with some assays such as Abbott Axsym and Bayer ACS:180, and it may require the use of PEG treated calibrators for other assays such as DPC Immulite. Reference range is as follows.
Specimen requirement is one SST tube of blood. | ||||||||||||||
| Last Updated on Monday, 18 July 2011 |