Menstrual cycle changes with marathon training: anovulation and short luteal phase

Canadian journal of applied sport sciences. Journal canadien des sciences appliquees au sport, 7(3), 173-177

PMID 7127652 Source

Abstract

Fourteen normal women (self-selected from 180 women enrolled) in a marathon training clinic kept basal body temperature (BBT), mileage, and weight records for 48 cycles before the marathon. Entry criteria were: Age 20-45, gynecologic age greater than 5 years, no hormone use, or weight change in 3 months. The women were 35.2 +/- 5.6 years in age, 22.6 +/- 5.1 years gynecologic age, runners of 4.1 +/- 2.5 years with premenstrual symptoms, previous pregnancy 4/14, no infertility and 2/14 remote amenorrhea. BBT records were obtained and analyzed by Vollman's criteria (1977). There was no weight loss. 32/48 cycles were biphasic but only 16 were normal in the length of the premenstrual phase (PreM = luteal, nl 10 - 16 d) with a mean of 11.1 +/- 1.2 days. The other 16 biphasic cycles had short PreM phase of 6.4 +/- 1.8 days. Monophasic (M = anovulatory) cycles occurred in 16/48 records. Cycles which were abnormal (Short PreM and M) differed only in that usual run length was longer (9.6 - 9.9 miles) than in normal cycles (7.9 +/- 2.4 miles). Marathon training may be associated with normal length but M and short PreM type cycles.

Topics

marathon training menstrual cycle changes, exercise induced anovulation, short luteal phase athletes, basal body temperature runners, athletic training cycle disturbances, exercise luteal phase deficiency, anovulation endurance training, running menstrual irregularities, athletic amenorrhea marathon training, basal body temperature cycle monitoring, ovulatory dysfunction female athletes, premenstrual phase shortening exercise

Cite this article

Prior, J. C., Cameron, K., Yuen, B. H., & Thomas, J. (1982). Menstrual cycle changes with marathon training: anovulation and short luteal phase. *Canadian journal of applied sport sciences. Journal canadien des sciences appliquees au sport*, *7*(3), 173-177.

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