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Hormones

Prolactin

The milk-production hormone — prolactin also influences fertility, and elevated levels are a common and treatable cause of irregular periods, infertility, and low testosterone.

SampleBlood (serum) FastingNot required (rest before sampling; avoid breast stimulation) Results1–2 days
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Summary

Prolactin is a pituitary hormone best known for stimulating breast milk production. Beyond breastfeeding, elevated prolactin (hyperprolactinaemia) is an important and treatable cause of irregular periods, infertility, low libido, and unexpected breast milk production in women, and of low testosterone and erectile dysfunction in men. Prolactin is a key test when investigating these symptoms.

Prolactin is released by the anterior pituitary under inhibitory control by dopamine. Anything that reduces dopamine’s effect — certain medications, a pituitary tumour (prolactinoma), or hypothalamic problems — raises prolactin.

High prolactin suppresses the reproductive axis, lowering FSH, LH, and the sex hormones. In women this causes irregular or absent periods, infertility, and sometimes galactorrhoea (milk production unrelated to breastfeeding). In men it causes low testosterone, reduced libido, and erectile dysfunction.

Prolactin can also rise temporarily from stress, exercise, breast stimulation, sleep, and even the stress of the blood draw itself — so a mildly raised result is often repeated under rested conditions. Persistently high levels warrant investigation, including for a prolactinoma.

What It Is

Prolactin is a single-chain polypeptide hormone secreted by lactotroph cells of the anterior pituitary. Unique among pituitary hormones, it is under predominant tonic inhibition by hypothalamic dopamine; reduced dopaminergic tone increases prolactin secretion.

Prolactin stimulates mammary gland development and milk synthesis, and suppresses GnRH pulsatility — explaining the reproductive effects of hyperprolactinaemia. Macroprolactin (a large, biologically inactive complex) can cause spuriously high readings and may need to be excluded.

Reference ranges: women < 500 mIU/L (approximately < 25 ng/mL); men < 325 mIU/L ( 5000 mIU/L) strongly suggest a prolactinoma.

Prolactin rises with stress, exercise, food, sleep, and breast stimulation. A mildly elevated result should be repeated under rested, fasting conditions. Persistent or marked elevation warrants pituitary imaging and macroprolactin assessment.

Functions

Milk production

Stimulates breast development and milk synthesis during and after pregnancy.

Fertility regulation

Elevated prolactin suppresses ovulation and sperm production — a common, treatable cause of infertility.

Reproductive axis control

High prolactin lowers FSH, LH, and sex hormones, disrupting periods in women and testosterone in men.

Pituitary tumour marker

Markedly raised prolactin is the hallmark of a prolactinoma — the most common hormone-secreting pituitary tumour.

Reference Ranges

Prolactin

Measured in mIU/L
Normal < 500 (women) / < 325 (men)
Mildly elevated 500–1000
Elevated > 1000
Status Range (mIU/L) Range (ng/mL) What it means
Normal < 500 (women) / < 325 (men) < 25 / < 15 Normal prolactin — no suppression of the reproductive axis.
Mildly elevated 500–1000 25–47 Mild elevation — often stress, medication, or macroprolactin; repeat under rested conditions.
Elevated > 1000 > 47 Significant hyperprolactinaemia — investigate for medication cause or prolactinoma.

Reference ranges are sex-specific and much higher in pregnancy and lactation. Mild elevations are commonly artefactual (stress, macroprolactin). Marked elevation (> 5000 mIU/L) strongly suggests a prolactinoma.

Symptoms of Imbalance

High prolactin disrupts the reproductive system; symptoms differ between women and men.

Low — Deficiency
  • Low prolactin is rarely a clinical problem
  • May occasionally impair milk production after childbirth
  • Can be part of broader pituitary failure (hypopituitarism)
High — Excess
  • Irregular or absent periods (women)
  • Infertility
  • Galactorrhoea (milk production unrelated to breastfeeding)
  • Low libido
  • Erectile dysfunction and low testosterone (men)
  • Headaches and visual disturbance (large prolactinoma)
  • Reduced bone density over time

Causes of Imbalance

Causes of Low
  • Hypopituitarism (broader pituitary failure)
  • Sheehan's syndrome (postpartum pituitary infarction)
  • Dopamine agonist medications
Causes of High
  • Prolactinoma (pituitary tumour)
  • Medications (antipsychotics, some antidepressants, metoclopramide, opioids)
  • Hypothyroidism
  • Stress, exercise, breast stimulation (transient)
  • Pregnancy and breastfeeding
  • Chronic kidney disease
  • Macroprolactin (artefactual elevation)

FAQs

Common causes include certain medications (especially antipsychotics, some antidepressants, and anti-sickness drugs like metoclopramide), an underactive thyroid, stress, and pregnancy or breastfeeding. The most important medical cause is a prolactinoma — a benign pituitary tumour. Mild elevations are often artefactual, due to stress at the time of the test or a harmless large form of prolactin called macroprolactin.

Yes — and importantly, it is often treatable. Elevated prolactin suppresses the hormones (FSH and LH) needed for ovulation and sperm production, leading to irregular or absent periods and infertility in women, and low testosterone and reduced fertility in men. Treating the cause — stopping a culprit medication, correcting thyroid function, or using a dopamine agonist for a prolactinoma — often restores fertility.

Prolactin rises temporarily with stress, exercise, food, sleep, breast stimulation, and even the discomfort of the blood draw. A single mildly elevated result is therefore often repeated under calm, rested conditions. The laboratory may also check for macroprolactin — a large, inactive form that causes a falsely high reading without any clinical effect.

A prolactinoma is a benign (non-cancerous) tumour of the pituitary gland that secretes prolactin. It is the most common type of hormone-producing pituitary tumour. Small ones cause hormonal symptoms (irregular periods, infertility, low libido, galactorrhoea); larger ones can also cause headaches and visual problems by pressing on nearby structures. Most are treated effectively with dopamine agonist medication rather than surgery.

References

  1. Melmed S, et al. Diagnosis and treatment of hyperprolactinemia: an Endocrine Society clinical practice guideline. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2011;96(2):273–288. View source
  2. Vilar L, et al. Pitfalls in the diagnostic evaluation of hyperprolactinemia. Neuroendocrinology. 2019;109(1):7–19. View source
  3. Majumdar A, Mangal NS. Hyperprolactinemia. J Hum Reprod Sci. 2013;6(3):168–175. View source

Last medically reviewed: June 2026 · Reviewed by the Trupoint Health Clinical Team.

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