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High Doses of D-Chiro-Inositol Alone Induce a PCO-Like Syndrome and Other Alterations in Mouse Ovaries

Arturo Bevilacqua, Jessica Dragotto, Micaela Lucarelli, Giovanna Di Emidio, Giovanni Monastra, Carla Tatone

2021International Journal of Molecular Sciences31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Administration of 1000-1500 mg/day D-Chiro-Inositol (DCIns) or a combination of Myo-Inositol (MyoIns) and DCIns in their plasma molar ratio (40:1) for three or more months are among recommended treatments for metabolic syndrome and/or Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS). We previously confirmed the efficacy of this formulation (8.2 mg/day MyoIns and 0.2 mg/day DCIns for 10 days) in a mouse PCOS model, but also observed negative effects on ovarian histology and function of formulations containing 0.4-1.6 mg/day DCIns. We therefore analyzed effects of higher doses of DCIns, 5, 10 and 20 mg/day, administered to young adult female mice for 21 days, on ovarian histology, serum testosterone levels and expression of the ovarian enzyme aromatase. Five mg/day DCIns (human correspondence: 1200 mg/day) altered ovarian histology, increased serum testosterone levels and reduced the amount of aromatase of negative controls, suggesting the induction of an androgenic PCOS model. In contrast, 10-20 mg/day DCIns (human correspondence: 2400-4800 mg/day) produced ovarian lesions resembling those typical of aged mice, and reduced serum testosterone levels without affecting aromatase amounts, suggesting a failure in steroidogenic gonadal activity. Notwithstanding physiological/biochemical differences between mice and humans, the observed pictures of toxicity for ovarian histology and function recommend caution when administering DCIns to PCOS patients at high doses and/or for periods spanning several ovulatory cycles.

Topics & Concepts

AromataseHistologyEndocrinologyInternal medicinePolycystic ovaryTestosterone (patch)OvaryHormoneBiologyMedicineInsulin resistanceObesityBreast cancerCancerOvarian function and disordersReproductive Biology and FertilityAssisted Reproductive Technology and Twin Pregnancy