Back to Search
Start Over
Nonhuman primates contribute unique understanding to anovulatory infertility in women
- Source :
- ILAR journal. 45(2)
- Publication Year :
- 2004
-
Abstract
- Anovulatory infertility affects a large proportion of reproductive-aged women. Major improvements in successful clinical treatment of this prevalent disorder in women's health have been made possible because of biomedical research employing nonhuman primates. Experiments on female rhesus monkeys were the first to demonstrate that the key hypothalamic neurotransmitter, gonadotropin-releasing hormone, involved in stimulating pituitary gonadotropin synthesis, storage, and release was bioactive only when released in approximately hourly bursts. This breakthrough in understanding gonadotropin regulation enabled identification of hypogonadotropic, apparently normogonadotropic, and hypergonadotropic forms of anovulatory infertility, and development of appropriate stimulatory or inhibitory gonadotropin therapies. Treatments to overcome anovulatory infertility represent one of the major advances in clinical reproductive endocrinology during the last 25 yr. The future promise of nonhuman primate models for human ovulatory dysfunction, however, may be based on an increased understanding of molecular and physiological mechanisms responsible for fetal programming of adult metabolic and reproductive defects and for obesity-related, hyperinsulinemic impairment of oocyte development.
- Subjects :
- Leptin
Primates
Time Factors
medicine.drug_class
Reproductive Endocrinology
Hypothalamus
Physiology
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Anovulation
Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone
Stress, Physiological
medicine
Animals
Humans
Ovarian Diseases
Fetal programming
Clinical treatment
business.industry
Pituitary gonadotropin
General Medicine
medicine.disease
Nonhuman primate
Hyperprolactinemia
Disease Models, Animal
Animal Science and Zoology
Female
Gonadotropin
business
Infertility, Female
Hormone
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10842020
- Volume :
- 45
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- ILAR journal
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....81110bc36ebe23fe43d66b393fb0cb8e