Subgroups in Fibromyalgia
Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Growth
Hormone Axis
Dysfunction in Fibromyalgia
Robert
M. Bennett, M.D.
Oregon Health and Sciences University
Over
the last 8 years it has become apparent that a subset of fibromyalgia
patients have a dysfunction of their hypothalamic pituitary axis. The
research at Oregon Health Sciences University has concentrated on abnormal
growth hormone (GH) secretion; other researchers have focused on abnormal
cortisol production.
It is likely that both of these endocrine abnormalities relate
to perturbation of the stress response and its effects on the release
of corticotrophin releasing hormone (CRH).
We
have found that about one third of FM patients have abnormally low levels
of IGF-1 (a stable marker of GH production). Some
patients who have initially normal levels of IGF-1, have a precipitous
decline in IGF-1 levels over 2-3 years. Standard
GH simulation tests with Clonidine and L-Dopa are usually abnormal in
FM patients; however, GH stimulation with Arginine is usually normal. As
Arginine stimulates GH secretion by inhibiting somatostatin (a
GH inhibiting molecule found in the hypothalamus), we reasoned that enhanced
somatostatin tone may result in a physiological block to GH secretion
in fibromyalgia. By
inhibiting somatostatin tone with Pyridostigmine, we were able
to normalize GH production in FM patients when they were subjected to
strenuous exercise (another stimulus for GH secretion). Thus
it appears likely that enhanced hypothalamic somatostatin tone contributes
to sub-optimal GH secretion in a subset of FM patients. Somatostatin
secretion is stimulated by CRH, thus linking abnormalities of the GH and
cortisol response to the stress axis. Importantly
GH deficient FM patients benefit from GH replacement therapy.
Unfortunately, this is prohibitively expensive (about $1,000/month).
Strategies to normalize somatostatin tone may be a more practical
approach to cost-effective therapy of GH deficiency in fibromyalgia.
Presented
at the National Fibromyalgia Research Association's Subgroups in Fibromyalgia
Symposium, September 26-27, 1999, in Portland, Oregon.