A sensitive and specific double antibody radioimmunoassay has been developed capable of measuring LH-RH in extracted human plasma. Thyrotropin releasing hormone, lysine vasopressin and most of LH-RH analogues did not appear to affect the assay. Hypothalamic extract and some of the LH-RH analogues produced displacement curves which were parallel to that obtained with the synthetic LH-RH. Sensitivity of the radioimmunoassay was about 3 pg per assay tube. The coefficient of variation of intraassay was 6.4%, while that of interassay was 9.6%. Exogenous LH-RH could be quantitatively extracted by acidic ethanol when varying amounts of synthetic LH-RH were added to plasma. Immunoreactivity of LH-RH was preserved in plasma until 2 hr in the cold and gradually reduced thereafter. The plasma levels in LH-RH were 20 pg/ml or less in normal adults and not detectable in children. The aged males over 60 yr and postmenopausal women showed a tendency to have higher levels of plasma LH-RH. Plasma LH-RH level was significantly higher in midcycle than in follicular and luteal stages. The disappearance rate of LH-RH from the circulation after intravenous injection could be represented as half times of 4-6 min. Between 0.2-0.4% of the injected dose was excreted into urine within 1 hr. These results indicate that the determination of LH-RH might be a useful tool for elucidating hypothalamic-pituitary-gonad interactions.
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