Evidence for the involvement of beta-endorphin in the human menstrual cycle

Fertility and sterility, 38(6), 701-704

PMID 6292005 Source

Abstract

The possibility that beta-endorphin, an endogenous opiate, is involved in the regulation of the menstrual cycle was examined. Daily serum beta-endorphin levels, in conjunction with luteinizing hormone, progesterone, and 17 beta-estradiol were measured during 26 hormonally normal menstrual cycles. Twenty-one cycles showed a preovulatory peak and postovulatory trough of beta-endorphin, 2 cycles had a postovulatory peak, and 3 had a postovulatory peak with sustained elevation. The raw data were standardized by conversion to "Z-scores," and the composite values were computed for each of the three classes described above. Significance within these three classes was assessed using a one-way analysis of variance with an F-ratio at 95% confidence limits. The composite plot of the 26 cycles showed a statistically significant preovulatory peak occurring 2 days prior to the luteinizing hormone surge and a postovulatory trough of beta-endorphin 5 days later. These results suggest that beta-endorphins play a significant role in the neurochemical mechanisms of gonadotropin release.

Topics

beta endorphin menstrual cycle regulation, endogenous opiates ovulation control, luteinizing hormone surge timing, preovulatory beta endorphin peak, neurochemical gonadotropin release, menstrual cycle biomarker patterns, daily hormone tracking across cycle, endorphin progesterone estradiol correlation, opiate peptides reproductive hormones, menstrual phase endorphin changes

Cite this article

Vrbicky, K. W., Baumstark, J. S., Wells, I. C., Hilgers, T. W., Kable, W. T., & Elias, C. J. (1982). Evidence for the involvement of beta-endorphin in the human menstrual cycle. *Fertility and sterility*, *38*(6), 701-704.

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