A role for menstruation in preconditioning the uterus for successful pregnancy

American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 200(6), 615.e1-615.e6156

DOI 10.1016/j.ajog.2008.11.037 PMID 19136085 Source

Abstract

Menstruation is widely viewed as serving no purpose other than to reinitiate the endometrial cycle in the absence of pregnancy. Yet, it is striking that cyclic endometrial decidualization followed by menstrual shedding is confined to the few species, including human beings, where placenta formation entails deep trophoblast invasion of maternal tissues and its vasculature. Both menstruation and pregnancy are inflammatory conditions that cause a degree of physiological ischemia-reperfusion tissue injury, albeit much more so in pregnancy. Thus, the emergence of cyclic menstruation may not have been an evolutionary coincidence but serves to protect uterine tissues from the profound hyperinflammation and oxidative stress associated with deep placentation, a process known as preconditioning. The concept of menstrual preconditioning provides a novel paradigm for understanding how reproductive disorders impact on pregnancy outcome. For example, endometriosis could be viewed as a disorder of exaggerated menstrual preconditioning that confers protection against placentation-related disorders, such as preeclampsia.

Topics

menstruation evolutionary purpose, menstrual cycle preconditioning pregnancy, endometrial decidualization placentation, deep trophoblast invasion physiology, menstruation inflammation oxidative stress, endometriosis preeclampsia protection, cyclic menstruation evolutionary adaptation, uterine preconditioning successful pregnancy, menstrual shedding reproductive function, ischemia reperfusion endometrium, menstrual physiology placentation disorders, endometriosis exaggerated preconditioning

Cite this article

Brosens, J. J., Parker, M. G., McIndoe, A., Pijnenborg, R., & Brosens, I. A. (2009). A role for menstruation in preconditioning the uterus for successful pregnancy. *American journal of obstetrics and gynecology*, *200*(6), 615.e1-6. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajog.2008.11.037

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