Running and ovulation positively change cancellous bone in premenopausal women

Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 31(6), 780-787

DOI 10.1097/00005768-199906000-00004 PMID 10378903 Source
Purpose

Exercise is understood to exert positive effects on bone. However cancellous bone has not been shown to increase with exercise. Previous results of our 1-yr observational prospective study in ovulatory women related 20% of the change in cancellous spinal bone mineral density (BMD), measured by quantitative computed tomography (QCT), to luteal phase length (the time from ovulation to menstruation, LL).

Methods

The 66 women who documented exercise daily included normally active women (N = 23) and those who ran consistently or were increasing running in preparation for a marathon (N = 43). Exercise did not affect BMD change in the women as a whole. We re-evaluated those data to determine whether exercise-related effects on spinal cancellous BMD change in regularly cycling premenopausal women were related to ovulatory characteristics. The potential relationship of exercise to BMD change was reanalyzed by stratifying women into tertiles according to average LL documented by quantitative basal temperature analysis.

Results

Repeated-measures ANOVA indicated independent positive effects of both luteal length (P = 0.001) and activity (P = 0.041). The 11 runners with LL > 10.9 d had a nonsignificant 0.5% increase in lumbar BMD while the 15 who averaged short LL (<9.9 d) experienced a significant 3.6% loss. In the runners as a group, however, kilometers run per week was negatively related to BMD change throughout (r = -0.347, P = 0.024).

Conclusions

These data are the first to indicate that, in women with regular cycles, luteal length and exercise independently and positively affect change in spinal cancellous BMD.

luteal phase length bone density, ovulation and bone health, basal body temperature bone mineral density, short luteal phase bone loss, exercise and ovulation bone effects, premenopausal bone health ovulatory cycles, spinal bone density menstrual cycle, quantitative computed tomography bone cycle, running effects on bone in cycling women, progesterone bone formation exercise

Petit, M. A., Prior, J. C., & Barr, S. I. (1999). Running and ovulation positively change cancellous bone in premenopausal women. *Medicine and science in sports and exercise*, *31*(6), 780-787. https://doi.org/10.1097/00005768-199906000-00004