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 Concern
 Treatment
 Pregnancy
 Experiences

Concern

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Prolactin disorders
After childbirth, secretion of the pituitary
hormone prolactin stimulates the breast to produce milk. During its
period of greatest secretion, prolactin inhibits the intermittent
release of GnRH. This prevents ovulation and causes the period of
subfertility that follows normal childbirth.
Hypersecretion of prolactin outside the period of lactation,
usually due to the presence of a benign, prolactin-secreting
pituitary tumour, is a cause of subfertility. Because GnRH is
inhibited, the hypophysis does not secrete LH and FSH in the normal
way. This means that there is no follicular development, no
ovulation and no menstruation. The signs of hyperprolactinaemia are
amenorrhoea and galactorrhoea (spontaneous leakage of milk from the
breast) and the condition is confirmed by measurement of
circulating prolactin levels.
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