Pulsatile release patterns of luteinizing hormone and progesterone in relation to symptom onset in women with premenstrual syndrome

Fertility and sterility, 64(2), 288-292

PMID 7615105 Source

Abstract

Objective

To explore the pulsatile-release characteristics of LH and P in women with premenstrual syndrome (PMS) compared with age-matched phase-matched controls.

Design

Prospective, repeated measures, two-group study.

Setting

Human volunteers in an academic research environment.

Participants

Six women with rigorously defined prospectively determined PMS; six age-matched phase-matched controls.

Main outcome measures

Frequency, amplitude, concentration, and coincident pulsatile release characteristics of LH and P at three symptom-related points of the luteal phase.

Results

No significant between-group differences in frequency, amplitude, or concentration were found. In pooled data, significant coincident pulsing between LH and P was demonstrated. The length of time between LH and P pulses systematically increased across the luteal phase, a finding not previously reported. In the PMS group only, significant coincident pulsing occurred at an unexpected zero time lag on the symptom-onset sampling day.

Conclusion

A progressively increasing coupling interval may reflect the gradual decline of the corpus luteum. Presence of a zero time lag between LH and P at symptom onset in women with PMS may indicate an aberrance in corpus luteum response to LH stimulation.

Topics

luteinizing hormone pms, progesterone patterns premenstrual syndrome, lh pulsatile release luteal phase, corpus luteum dysfunction pms, progesterone pulsing patterns, luteal phase hormone monitoring, premenstrual syndrome hormone patterns, lh progesterone coupling interval, pms hormonal assessment, corpus luteum response lh, luteal phase progesterone pulsatility

Cite this article

Lewis, L. L., Greenblatt, E. M., Rittenhouse, C. A., Veldhuis, J. D., & Jaffe, R. B. (1995). Pulsatile release patterns of luteinizing hormone and progesterone in relation to symptom onset in women with premenstrual syndrome. *Fertility and sterility*, *64*(2), 288-292.

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