Menstrual cycle pattern and fertility: a prospective follow-up study of pregnancy and early embryonal loss in 295 couples who were planning their first pregnancy
Niels E. Skakkebæk, J P Bonde, E Ernst, T B Henriksen, Niels H. Hjøllund, Tina Kold Jensen, H A Kolstad, J Olsen, A Giwercman, N E Skakkebaek
To characterize how the menstrual cycle pattern relates to fertility regardless of potential biases caused by inappropriate coital timing during the menstrual cycle or early embryonal loss.
Design
Prospective follow-up study.
Setting
Healthy couples recruited throughout Denmark.
PATIENT(S): Two hundred ninety-five couples who were planning their first pregnancy were followed up from the discontinuation of birth control until a pregnancy was recognized within six menstrual cycles. Early embryonal losses were detected by changes in urinary hCG levels.
INTERVENTION(S): None.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): The probability of pregnancy occurring within one menstrual cycle (fecundity).
RESULT(S): In women who had a cycle length that differed by >10 days from the usual cycle length, fecundity was approximately 25% that of women who had no variation (odds ratio 0.25, 95% confidence interval 0.09-0.68). When the combined effect of cycle variation and cycle length was assessed, cycle variation was a persistent strong predictor of fecundity.
CONCLUSION(S): The mechanisms of the present findings probably are female functional disturbances in ovulation, conception, implantation, or sustained pregnancy, linked with variable menstrual cycle length. Thus, identification of medical and environmental causes of abnormal menstrual cycle patterns may provide clues to the causes of infertility. Moreover, the menstrual cycle pattern also should be taken into consideration in the clinical decision-making process.
menstrual cycle length variation and fecundity, irregular menstrual cycle pattern fertility prospective study, cycle length variability early embryonal loss, urinary hCG early pregnancy loss detection, menstrual cycle irregularity predictor of subfertility, time to pregnancy menstrual cycle characteristics, cycle variation odds ratio conception probability, first pregnancy planning couples prospective follow-up, ovulation dysfunction menstrual cycle variability, Kolstad Bonde menstrual cycle fertility Denmark, fecundity measurement per menstrual cycle, environmental causes abnormal menstrual patterns infertility
PMID 10065787 10065787 DOI 10.1016/s0015-0282(98)00474-9 10.1016/s0015-0282(98)00474-9
Cite this article
Kolstad, H. A., Bonde, J. P., Hjøllund, N. H., Jensen, T. K., Henriksen, T. B., Ernst, E., Giwercman, A., Skakkebaek, N. E., & Olsen, J. (1999). Menstrual cycle pattern and fertility: a prospective follow-up study of pregnancy and early embryonal loss in 295 couples who were planning their first pregnancy. *Fertility and sterility*, *71*(3), 490-496. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(98)00474-9
Kolstad HA, Bonde JP, Hjøllund NH, Jensen TK, Henriksen TB, Ernst E, et al. Menstrual cycle pattern and fertility: a prospective follow-up study of pregnancy and early embryonal loss in 295 couples who were planning their first pregnancy. Fertil Steril. 1999;71(3):490-496. doi:10.1016/s0015-0282(98)00474-9
Kolstad, H. A., et al. "Menstrual cycle pattern and fertility: a prospective follow-up study of pregnancy and early embryonal loss in 295 couples who were planning their first pregnancy." *Fertility and sterility*, vol. 71, no. 3, 1999, pp. 490-496.
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