General Endocrine Adaptations in Pregnancy - The Great Orchestration
- Orchestrated by maternal, fetal, & placental hormones.
- Placenta: Primary endocrine driver (hCG, hPL, estrogens, progesterone).
- Maternal System Adaptations:
- Pituitary: ↑ Prolactin; FSH/LH suppressed.
- Thyroid: ↑ Thyroxine-binding globulin (TBG), ↑ total T4/T3; free T4/T3 usually normal.
- Pancreas: Progressive insulin resistance (hPL, progesterone, cortisol); ↑ insulin secretion.
- Adrenals: ↑ Cortisol, ↑ aldosterone.
- Purpose: Nurture fetus, prepare for labor, delivery, lactation.
⭐ The fetoplacental unit acts synergistically, with fetal precursors often metabolized by the placenta into active hormones.
Pituitary and Thyroid Gland Dynamics - Master Gland Makeover
- Pituitary Gland:
- Enlarges (due to lactotroph hyperplasia)
- Prolactin: ↑↑ (stimulates milk synthesis; inhibits GnRH, FSH/LH)
- GH: Maternal GH ↓; Placental GH (hPGH) ↑ (contributes to maternal insulin resistance)
- ACTH: ↑ (stimulates ↑ maternal cortisol)
- FSH/LH: ↓↓ (ovulation suppressed by E2, P4, prolactin)
- Thyroid Gland:
- Slight enlargement; ↑ vascularity & colloid
- TBG (Thyroxine-Binding Globulin): ↑↑ (estrogen effect) → Total T4 & T3 ↑↑ (maintains euthyroid state)
- Free T4 & T3: Generally normal (may transiently ↑ in early pregnancy)
- TSH:
- 1st trimester: Transient ↓ (hCG's TSH-like activity)
- Later trimesters: Normalizes
- Iodine requirement: ↑ (for fetal thyroid development)
⭐ hCG's structural similarity to TSH can cause transient gestational hyperthyroidism (suppressed TSH, normal or slightly ↑ free T4) in the first trimester.

Adrenal, Pancreas & Metabolic Shifts - Fueling for Two
Adrenal Gland:
- Cortisol: ↑ Total & free levels (CBG ↑).
- Fetal lung maturation; ↑ insulin resistance.
- Aldosterone: ↑↑ (RAAS activation).
- Na⁺/H₂O retention, plasma volume expansion.
- Androgens (DHEA-S): ↑ (fetal origin, placental estrogen conversion).
Pancreas & Metabolic Shifts:
- Insulin Resistance: Progressively ↑ (peaks 3rd trimester).
- By: hPL, progesterone, estrogen, cortisol.
- "Diabetogenic state" for fetal glucose.
- β-cells: Hyperplasia & hypertrophy → ↑ insulin.
- Human Placental Lactogen (hPL):
- From placenta.
- Key for ↑ insulin resistance; ↑ lipolysis (maternal fat use, spares glucose/AAs for fetus).
- Metabolic States:
- Early: Anabolic (fat storage).
- Late: Catabolic (lipolysis, ↑FFAs, ↑ketones) → "accelerated starvation" fasting.
⭐ hPL is a primary driver of maternal insulin resistance, ensuring continuous fetal glucose supply.

Placental Hormones - The Fetal Support System

- Human Chorionic Gonadotropin (hCG)
- Source: Syncytiotrophoblast.
- Functions: Maintains corpus luteum (ensuring early progesterone supply); stimulates fetal testicular testosterone.
- Characteristic: Peaks at 8-10 weeks gestation. $\beta$-subunit confers specificity.
- Human Placental Lactogen (hPL) (Chorionic Somatomammotropin)
- Source: Syncytiotrophoblast.
- Functions: Induces maternal insulin resistance (↑ glucose for fetus), stimulates lipolysis (maternal fuel), mammotropic effects.
- Levels rise progressively, reflecting placental mass.
- Progesterone (📌 "Pregnancy Guardian")
- Source: Corpus luteum (first 6-7 weeks), then primarily placenta.
- Functions: Maintains uterine quiescence (relaxes myometrium), supports decidua, prepares breasts for lactation.
- Estrogens (Primarily Estriol - E3)
- Source: Feto-placental unit; placenta converts fetal adrenal DHEA-S.
- E3: Major pregnancy estrogen; its levels indicate feto-placental well-being.
- Functions: Promotes uterine growth, ↑ uteroplacental blood flow, ductal breast development.
⭐ Serial monitoring of Estriol (E3) levels can be crucial in high-risk pregnancies as a significant drop may indicate fetal compromise.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- hCG, produced by syncytiotrophoblast, peaks 8-10 weeks, maintains corpus luteum.
- Estriol (E3), the dominant estrogen, indicates feto-placental well-being.
- Progesterone, from corpus luteum then placenta, ensures uterine quiescence.
- Human Placental Lactogen (hPL) has anti-insulin (diabetogenic) effects, ensures fetal glucose.
- Pituitary Prolactin levels rise significantly, preparing for lactation.
- Estrogen ↑ TBG → ↑ Total T4/T3; Free T4/T3 usually normal.
- ↑ CBG → ↑ total cortisol; free cortisol also ↑.
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