Menstrual cycle symptom variation in a community sample of women using and not using oral contraceptives

Acta obstetricia et gynecologica Scandinavica, 79(9), 757-764

PMID 10993099 Source

Abstract

Background

The prevalence of significant symptom change (symptom cyclicity) prospectively rated over multiple menstrual cycles has not been established in a non-clinical population.

Methods

Seventy-three women charted 57 symptoms over 2-6 menstrual cycles each. Symptoms, and summarized symptom scores within seven symptom groups, were tested for changes between the follicular phase and the luteal phase of each cycle. Recurrent symptom cyclicity over multiple cycles within individuals was ascertained and the stability between cycles of mean symptom scores for both the follicular phase and the luteal phase.

Results

Forty-five percent of the participants experienced cyclicity over multiple cycles in at least one symptom and 23% in at least one symptom group. Eighteen percent of the participants consistently reported a higher symptom score during the luteal phase compared to the follicular phase (a PMS-like pattern) in all symptoms in which they experienced a change. The remaining 27% experienced a varying direction of change in the same symptom between cycles, or consistently experienced a lower symptom score during the luteal phase (a reverse PMS-like pattern) of the cycles they charted. Recurrent cyclicity was experienced by 16% of the participants in one symptom; in two symptoms by 15%; in 3 8 symptoms by 14%; in one symptom group by 19% and in two symptom groups by only 4% of participants. Average symptom severity did not vary significantly between cycles.

Conclusion

Due to the varied direction of symptom severity change over multiple cycles, prospective daily ratings are necessary to achieve a true picture of menstrual related symptom cyclicity in the general population.

Topics

menstrual cycle symptom tracking, daily symptom charting menstrual cycle, premenstrual syndrome symptom patterns, oral contraceptives menstrual symptoms, cycle charting symptom variation, prospective menstrual symptom diary, luteal phase symptoms prospective study, follicular phase luteal phase symptom comparison, menstrual cycle symptom cyclicity, pms symptom patterns prospective rating, menstrual symptom charting methodology

Cite this article

Sveinsdóttir, H., & Bäckström, T. (2000). Menstrual cycle symptom variation in a community sample of women using and not using oral contraceptives. *Acta obstetricia et gynecologica Scandinavica*, *79*(9), 757-764.

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