Conditioning exercise and premenstrual symptoms

  • Vancouver Hospital and Health Sciences Centre ROR
  • University of British Columbia ROR

The Journal of Reproductive Medicine, 32(6), 423-428

Source

Abstract

Exercise is commonly listed as a remedy for the premenstrual syndrome (PMS), although no study has proven that it is an effective therapy. Numerous reports have suggested that exercise is associated with improved mood and symptoms. In those reports, however, the diagnosis of PMS was not clearly documented, nor was the exercise carefully controlled. Preliminary evidence suggests that exercise training in ovulatory, sedentary women and intensified training in women athletes decrease mild premenstrual symptoms. Although conditioning exercise is associated with short luteal phase and anovulatory cycles, decreases in mild premenstrual symptoms occur prior to menstrual cycle changes. Controlled studies of PMS and exercise training may not only document an effective, nonpharmacologic therapy for PMS but also clarify the hormonal etiology of this complex biobehavioral phenomenon.

Topics

Prior JC exercise premenstrual symptoms conditioning, physical exercise premenstrual syndrome nonpharmacologic therapy, conditioning exercise anovulatory cycles short luteal phase, exercise training PMS sedentary women ovulatory, Prior Vigna premenstrual syndrome exercise treatment, aerobic exercise premenstrual mood symptoms improvement, exercise induced menstrual cycle changes luteal phase, PMS nonpharmacologic treatment controlled studies exercise, premenstrual syndrome hormonal etiology physical activity, ovulatory women exercise premenstrual symptom reduction

Cite this article

Prior, J. C., & Vigna, Y. (1987). Conditioning exercise and premenstrual symptoms. *The Journal of reproductive medicine*, *32*(6), 423-428.

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