Luteal phase deficiency after completely normal follicular and periovulatory phases

Fertility and sterility, 52(6), 919-923

DOI 10.1016/s0015-0282(16)53152-5 PMID 2591570 Source

Abstract

Luteal phase defect (LPD) accounts for a significant proportion of reproductive disorders, however its etiology is still debated. A prospective study was performed on 37 ovulatory women to determine whether LPD can occur in cycles characterized by completely normal folliculogenesis. Criteria for normal folliculogenesis included: a gradual rise of serum estradiol, a luteinizing hormone (LH) surge, the presence of a dominant follicle that disappeared, an increase of serum progesterone, and normal serum levels of prolactin, testosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, follicle-stimulating hormone, and LH. Thirty of 37 women fulfilled the above mentioned strict criteria and underwent endometrial biopsy in the late luteal phase. Seven of 30 (23%) demonstrated a delay in endometrial development and all had normal hormonal and ultrasonographic parameters of folliculogenesis and ovulation. Women with delayed endometrial development demonstrated slightly longer follicular phases (17.0 +/- 1.1 versus 14.5 +/- 0.3 days). Perfectly normal follicular and periovulatory events may be followed by deficient luteal phases.

Topics

luteal phase defect normal folliculogenesis, lpd despite normal ovulation ultrasound monitoring, endometrial biopsy luteal phase delay dating, luteal phase inadequacy follicular phase normal, deficient corpus luteum normal lh surge, prospective study luteal phase deficiency ovulatory women, progesterone deficiency normal follicle development, cycle timed endometrial assessment infertility, hormonal luteal phase insufficiency diagnosis, ultrasound endometrial dating luteal defect

Cite this article

Grunfeld, L., Sandler, B., Fox, J., Boyd, C., Kaplan, P., & Navot, D. (1989). Luteal phase deficiency after completely normal follicular and periovulatory phases. *Fertility and sterility*, *52*(6), 919-923. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(16)53152-5

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