Metabolic endotoxaemia – a potential novel link between ovarian inflammation and impaired progesterone production

Kelton Tremellen, Naeema Syedi, Sze Tan, K Pearce

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    23 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Introduction: Medical conditions such as obesity and inflammatory bowel disease are associated with impaired luteal function, menstrual disturbance and infertility. It is proposed that the disturbance in gut wall integrity ("leaky gut") seen in these conditions may result in the passage of bacterial endotoxin (LPS) from the colonic lumen into the circulation that may initiate inflammation in the ovary and subsequently impair hormone production. Methods: Quantify the association between systemic levels of LBP, a marker of endotoxin exposure, and levels of inflammation in the ovary (follicular fluid IL-6), plus steroid hormone production in 45 women undergoing IVF treatment. Results: Endotoxaemia (LBP) were positively correlated with plasma CRP and inflammation within the ovary (follicular fluid IL-6). Furthermore, endotoxaemia was negatively correlated with progesterone production. Conclusion: The observed correlations, together with previously published animal studies linking endotoxin exposure to impaired luteal function, suggest that the translocation of bacterial endotoxin from the gut lumen into the circulation has the potential to interfere with progesterone production and result in luteal deficiency.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)309-312
    Number of pages4
    JournalGynecological Endocrinology
    Volume31
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2015

    Keywords

    • Endotoxaemia
    • IL-6
    • Lipopolysaccharide
    • Luteal
    • Progesterone

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