| Literature DB >> 29487565 |
Alexandre Hohl1,2, Fernando Areas Zanela1, Gabriela Ghisi2, Marcelo Fernando Ronsoni1,2, Alexandre Paim Diaz1,3, Marcelo Liborio Schwarzbold1,3, Alcir Luiz Dafre1,4, Benjamin Reddi5,6, Kátia Lin1,7, Felipe Dal Pizzol1,8, Roger Walz1,7.
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a worldwide core public health problem affecting mostly young male subjects. An alarming increase in incidence has turned TBI into a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in young adults as well as a tremendous resource burden on the health and welfare sector. Hormone dysfunction is highly prevalent during the acute phase of severe TBI. In particular, investigation of the luteinizing hormone (LH) and testosterone levels during the acute phase of severe TBI in male has identified a high incidence of low testosterone levels in male patients (36.5-100%) but the prognostic significance of which remains controversial. Two independent studies showed that normal or elevated levels of LH levels earlier during hospitalization are significantly associated with higher mortality/morbidity. The association between LH levels and prognosis was independent of other predictive variables such as neuroimaging, admission Glasgow coma scale, and pupillary reaction. The possible mechanisms underlying this association and further research directions in this field are discussed. Overall, current data suggest that LH levels during the acute phase of TBI might contribute to accurate prognostication and further prospective multicentric studies are required to develop more sophisticated predictive models incorporating biomarkers such as LH in the quest for accurate outcome prediction following TBI. Moreover, the potential therapeutic benefits of modulating LH during the acute phase of TBI warrant investigation.Entities:
Keywords: gonadotrophic axis; luteinizing hormone; prognosis; testosterone; traumatic brain injury
Year: 2018 PMID: 29487565 PMCID: PMC5816813 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2018.00029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Previous studies showing gonadotrophic axis hormones profile during acute phase of severe TBI in male.
| Reference | Time-course after TBI | Results in male | Clinical correlations and significance for mortality and morbidity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Agha et al. ( | 7 to 20 days (median 12) | Low testosterone levels in 79% of patients | Positive correlation between testosterone and TBI and GCS ( |
| Cernak et al. ( | Up to 7 days | Testosterone decrease in 2 days after TBI | Association between hormone levels and TBI severity and prognosis were not analyzed |
| Dalwadi et al. ( | 24 h | Low testosterone in 63.5% of patients | Correlation between testosterone and GCS did not reach significance |
| Hohl et al. ( | Up to 48 h | Low LH in 36.8% of patients in the 1st day and 41.8% in the 2nd day | Trend for independent association between normal or elevated LH mortality ( |
| Kleindienst et al. ( | Admission Day 1 and 7 | In comparison to admission, the mean LH and testosterone levels decrease on day 3 and 7 after TBI | Association between injury severity and low testosterone and LH levels on day 3 |
| Klose et al. ( | Up to 12 days | Lower LH levels and testosterone | Correlation between low testosterone and TBI severity |
| Hari Kumar et al. ( | 24 h | Low testosterone in 37.5% of patients | No association between LH or testosterone and GCS |
| Olivecrona et al. ( | Days 1 and 4 | Low testosterone in 82.1 and 100% of patients at the 1st and 4th day after the TBI respectively | Higher LH on day 1 (but not day 4) in patients with unfavorable outcome (morbidity and mortality) 3 months after TBI |
| Tanriverdi et al. ( | 24 h | Significant lower testosterone levels, but not LH, in patients with severe TBI | Positive correlation between testosterone and GCS |
| Wagner et al. ( | Day 1 to 9 | Low LH in 50% of patients | LH or testosterone during acute phase of injury was not associated with the prognosis (GOS) 6 months after the TBI |
TBI, traumatic brain injury; GCS, Glasgow coma scale; GOS, Glasgow outcome scale; ISS, injury severity score; Marshal grade, Marshal Computed Tomography Classification; ICPmax, maximal intracranial pressure.
Figure 1Serum level (mean ± SE) of luteinizing hormone (LH) (A) or total testosterone (B) determined in the Sample 1 (n = 57, median of 10 h after traumatic brain injury (TBI), IQ range = 6–18 h), Sample 2 (n = 55, median of 30 h after TBI, IQ range = 22–37), and Sample 3 (n = 53, median of 70 h after TBI, IQ range 53–77) according to hospital mortality. (C) Table showing the hospital mortality according to the LH levels adjusted for admission Glasgow coma scale and pupils’ examination. The normal or high LH levels in sample 1 (p = 0.08) and 2 (p = 0.06) showed a trend for independent association with mortality and a significant (p = 0.008) independent association in the Sample 3. (D) The survival and death-related TBI mechanisms may affects hypothalamus and hypophysis resulting in the LH levels changes (black arrows). It is unknown if the LH level itself affects the prognosis (dashed arrows) or is only an epiphenomenon without a cause-effect relationship with the patients’ prognosis. aSignificant difference (p = 0.04) between Sample 2 and Sample 1 and Sample 3 and Sample 1 by Paired-Samples “T” test; bSignificant difference between survivors and non-survivors for “p” < 0.02 (Sample 1) by Student “t” test; cSignificant difference between survivors and non-survivors for “p” = 0 0.002 (Sample 2) by Student “t” test; dSignificant difference between survivors and non-survivors for “p” = 0.01 (Sample 3) by Student “t” test; eSignificant difference from the Sample 1 for “p” < 0.0001 by Paired-Samples “T” test; fSignificant difference from the Sample 1 for “p” = 0.02 by Paired-Samples “T” test; gSignificant difference from the Sample 1 for “p” = 0.002 by Paired-Samples “T” test. h,IResults previously published by Hohl et al. (10) and included as a part of his PhD Thesis in Medical Sciences (11).