Luteal phase dysfunction in endometriosis: elevated progesterone levels in peripheral and ovarian veins during the follicular phase

Fertility and sterility, 47(6), 925-929

DOI 10.1016/s0015-0282(16)59224-3 PMID 3595900 Source

Abstract

Endometriosis has been associated with corpus luteum inadequacy and abnormalities of luteal phase progesterone (P) secretion. In this study, abnormal luteolysis, as a second factor of luteal dysfunction, was assessed in 13 women with endometriosis and 25 control patients by measurement of ovarian vein estradiol (E2) and P during the follicular phase. The results reveal that women with endometriosis have (1) significantly lower ovarian vein E2, (2) significantly higher both peripheral and ovarian vein P, and (3) threefold higher P/E2 ratios than controls during the follicular phase. These data support the concept of continued P production from an active corpus luteum well into the follicular phase of the following cycle in women with endometriosis. Failure of adequate luteolysis is a second aspect of luteal dysfunction in endometriosis and strongly supports the growing body of data confirming ovulatory asynchrony in the minimal; endometriosis infertility syndrome.

Topics

endometriosis luteal phase dysfunction progesterone, abnormal luteolysis endometriosis infertility, follicular phase progesterone endometriosis elevated, ovulatory asynchrony endometriosis minimal disease, corpus luteum inadequacy endometriosis, endometriosis follicular phase hormone abnormalities, prolonged luteal phase endometriosis ovarian vein, progesterone estradiol ratio endometriosis, luteal dysfunction endometriosis root cause

Cite this article

Ayers, J. W., Birenbaum, D. L., & Menon, K. J. (1987). Luteal phase dysfunction in endometriosis: elevated progesterone levels in peripheral and ovarian veins during the follicular phase. *Fertility and sterility*, *47*(6), 925-929. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(16)59224-3

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