Clinical investigation of the menstrual cycle. III. Clinical, endometrial, and endocrine aspects of luteal defect

Fertility and sterility, 35(3), 296-303

DOI 10.1016/s0015-0282(16)45374-4 PMID 7202753 Source

Abstract

This study was intended to correlate different clinical and biologic parameters to better define luteal insufficiency (LI) and to contribute to a better understanding of its origin. Endometrial patterns were used as the basis for classification of clinical cases. Of 328 outpatients with menstrual disorders and/or infertility, 88 were considered to have LI. Their cycles were compared with 79 normal cycles. Two different principal endometrial patterns of LI are described: pure LI, when the endometrium is more than 2 days out of phase; and LI with persistent estrogenic influence, when the histologic estrogenic stigmata are excessive during the luteal phase. Basal body temperature charts demonstrated menstrual cycle disturbances: either ovulation delay or a slow increase in temperature (longer than 2 days). Plasma steroid concentrations also demonstrated a perturbation of the entire menstrual cycle: progesterone levels were statistically significantly lower in LI than in normal cycles and this defect was worse when the estrogenic influence was persistent; the preovulatory estradiol peak was disturbed in all circumstances, as was the concentration of endometrial steroid receptors. These simultaneous abnormalities strongly suggest a central origin of LI.

Topics

luteal phase defect endometrial biopsy, luteal insufficiency diagnosis, progesterone deficiency endometrial dating, short luteal phase diagnosis, luteal phase defect BBT pattern, endometrial out of phase luteal defect, low progesterone luteal phase, estradiol progesterone luteal phase, luteal phase inadequacy infertility, luteal defect endometrial receptors, corpus luteum insufficiency diagnosis

Cite this article

Gautray, J. P., de Brux, J., Tajchner, G., Robel, P., & Mouren, M. (1981). Clinical investigation of the menstrual cycle. III. Clinical, endometrial, and endocrine aspects of luteal defect. *Fertility and sterility*, *35*(3), 296-303. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(16)45374-4

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