Abnormal ovarian cycles as diagnosed by ultrasound and serum estradiol levels

Fertility and sterility, 37(3), 342-347

DOI 10.1016/s0015-0282(16)46093-0 PMID 7060784 Source

Abstract

A significant portion of human infertility is presumably due to defective ovulation, including patients who fail to conceive despite medical induction of ovulation, those who fail despite repeated timely donor inseminations, and those with "infertility of unknown etiology". All point out the inadequacy of standard criteria for normal ovulation. This investigation correlates preovulatory serum estradiol and gonadotropin concentrations with dominant follicle growth measured ultrasonographically and serum progesterone levels. The data indicate a 35% incidence of cycles with significantly abnormal serum estradiol levels, decreased dominant follicle size, and abnormal progesterone levels despite biphasic basal body temperature curves and normal cycle length. If these cycles represent inadequate or abnormal ovulation, they can be distinguished from adequate cycles prior to follicle rupture and may benefit the treatment of human infertility.

Topics

abnormal ovulation ultrasound estradiol, dominant follicle growth ultrasound monitoring, estradiol levels ovulation defects, biphasic basal body temperature abnormal cycles, preovulatory estradiol follicle size correlation, infertility unknown etiology ovulation assessment, ultrasound follicle tracking estradiol progesterone, inadequate ovulation serum hormone levels, ovulatory cycle abnormalities ultrasound diagnosis, luteinizing hormone surge follicle maturation, cycle biomarkers inadequate ovulation

Cite this article

Polan, M. N., Totora, M., Caldwell, B. V., DeCherney, A. H., Haseltine, F. P., & Kase, N. (1982). Abnormal ovarian cycles as diagnosed by ultrasound and serum estradiol levels. *Fertility and sterility*, *37*(3), 342-347. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(16)46093-0

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