scholarly journals Levels of Adipokines and Some Steroids During the Menstrual Cycle

2015 ◽  
pp. S147-S154 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. ŠRÁMKOVÁ ◽  
M. DUŠKOVÁ ◽  
J. VÍTKŮ ◽  
J. VČELÁK ◽  
P. MATUCHA ◽  
...  

The cyclical effects of hormones during the menstrual cycle (MC) are not just responsible for driving ovulation, but also have significant influence on dietary intake and appetite, as well as psychological and behavioral changes. The aim of our study was to describe changes and relationships between the MC and selected steroids, adipokines and food intake-related hormones. Twenty-seven women with regular menstrual cycles were included in the study, and their hormonal spectrum was measured in regular intervals starting from the first day of their cycle. Classical changes in gonadotropins, estrogens and progesterone during the menstrual cycle are accompanied by less striking but significant changes in 17-hydroxyprogesterone and testosterone. No significant changes show dehydroepiandrosterone and its 7-oxygenated metabolites. Adipokines show a tendency to increase during ovulation, while ghrelin and resistin decrease. There is also a remarkable association of sex hormone-binding globulin on the day of the cycle. Our results demonstrate that changes to adipokines during the menstrual cycle are not substantial, but nonetheless can play a role in the changes of food intake described in the literature. Precise descriptions of physiological changes in healthy women are important in helping us understand the significance of the changes accompanying various pathological states.

2016 ◽  
Vol 62 (5) ◽  
pp. 41-42
Author(s):  
Monika Šrámková ◽  
Michaela Dušková ◽  
Jana Vítků ◽  
Petr Matucha ◽  
Olga Bradnová ◽  
...  

Background. The cyclical effects of hormones during the menstrual cycle (MC) are responsible for driving ovulation. The information about roles of adipokines within the scope of MC are not definite. Leptin plays a role in sexual function and regulating the onset of puberty. Thin girls often fail to ovulate or release an egg from an ovary during menstruation cycles. Leptin also acts on specific receptors in the hypothalamus to inhibit appetite. Levels of leptin are increased in women suffering from premenstrual syndrome.Aim. The aim of our study was to describe physiological changes of selected steroids and adipokines at healthy women during the MC.Methods. Twenty-seven women with regular menstrual cycles were included in the study. Each sample was collected in cooled EDTA tubes, centrifuged at 2000 rpm in a refrigerated centrifuge, and stored at –80 °C. For all samples we measured luteinizing hormone (LH), follicularstimulating hormone (FSH), sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), testosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), estradiol, 7α-DHEA, 7β-DHEA, 7-oxoDHEA, 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OH P), progesterone, cortisol, adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) by RIA and IRMA. Levels in plasma of hormones associated with food intake (c-peptide, ghreline, GIP, GLP, GLP-1, glucagon, insulin, leptin, PAI-1, resistin and visfatin) were measured using magnetic bead-based multiple assays (x-MAP technology, Luminex Corporation). Two kits were used: the 10-plex Bio-Plex Pro Human Diabetes assay and the 2-plex Bio-Plex Pro Human Adiponectin and Adipsin assay (both Bio-Rad Laboratories).Patient. Twenty-seven women with regular menstrual cycles (cycle length 28±2 days) were included in the study. The average age of the women was 31.8±3.56, and average BMI 22.9±2.8. The women used no hormonal contraceptives or other medicines influencing the production of steroid hormones, and were non-smokers. Before enrollment in the study, all signed informed consent that was approved by the local ethical committee of the Institute of Endocrinology.Intervention. Fasting blood samples were taken in the morning between 7 and 8 am. The first sampling was done at the start of the menstrual cycle (1st or 2nd day). Subsequent samples were taken at regular intervals every three days, for a total of 10 samples taken during the study.Main outcome measures. During the MC we found increased levels of testosterone, estradiol, progesterone, and 17-hydroxyprogesterone during ovulation. SHBG gradually increased after ovulation. There was a significant decrease in resistin levels during ovulation, followed by an increase in the latter part of the cycle. Adipsin showed a notable increase during ovulation, but this increase was not statistically significant.Results. Classical changes in gonadotropins, estrogens and progesterone during the menstrual cycle are accompanied by less striking but significant changes in 17-hydroxyprogesterone and testosterone. No significant changes show dehydroepiandrosterone and its 7-oxygenated metabolites. Adipokines show a tendency to increase during ovulation, while ghrelin and resistin decrease. There is also a remarkable association of sex hormone binging globuline (SHBG) on the day of the cycle.Conclusions. Our results demonstrate that changes to adipokines during the menstrual cycle are not substantial. Differing leptin levels are characteristic for premenstrual syndrome. Precise descriptions of physiological changes in healthy women are important in helping us understand the significance of the changes accompanying various pathological states.


1982 ◽  
Vol 101 (2) ◽  
pp. 248-253 ◽  
Author(s):  
Viveca Odlind ◽  
Kerstin Elamsson ◽  
Doris E. Englund ◽  
Arne Victor ◽  
Elof D. B. Johansson

Abstract. Sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) levels were studied for possible effects of oestradiol-17β on SHBG. No change in SHBG plasma was recorded during normal menstrual cycles or during treatment with oestradiol-17β to menopausal women. However, gonadotrophin treatment to amenorrhoeic women to induce ovulation resulted in high oestradiol concentrations and a pronounced increase in SHBG was found during the luteal phase of these cycles. A marked increase of SHBG was also recorded in a woman with pronounced fluctuations of oestradiol during treatment with levonorgestrel sc implants for contraception. In conclusion, effects on SHBG were only found when extraordinarily high levels of plasma oestradiol were recorded.


2002 ◽  
Vol 102 (6) ◽  
pp. 639-644 ◽  
Author(s):  
William H. COOKE ◽  
David A. LUDWIG ◽  
Paul S. HOGG ◽  
Dwain L. ECKBERG ◽  
Victor A. CONVERTINO

The menstrual cycle provokes several physiological changes that could influence autonomic regulatory mechanisms. We studied the carotid-cardiac baroreflex in ten healthy young women on four occasions over the course of their menstrual cycles (days 0-8, 9-14, 15-20 and 21-25). We drew blood during each session for analysis of oestrogen, progesterone and noradrenaline (norepinephrine) levels, and assessed carotid-cardiac baroreflex function by analysing R-R interval responses to graded neck pressure sequences. Oestrogen levels followed a classical two-peak (cubic) response, with elevated levels on days 9-14 and 21-25 compared with days 0-8 and 15-20 (P =0.0032), while progesterone levels increased exponentially from days 9-14 to days 21-25 (P = 0.0063). Noradrenaline levels increased from an average of 137pg/ml during the first three measurement periods to 199pg/ml during days 21-25 (P = 0.0456). Carotid-cardiac baroreflex gain and operational point were not statistically different at any of the time points during the menstrual cycle (P⩾0.18). These findings are consistent with the notion that beat-to-beat vagal-cardiac regulation does not change over the course of the normal menstrual cycle.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Lee Kuhr

Context: Vitamin D is associated with a host of reproductive outcomes, but there is little research investigating these relationships in healthy, regularly cycling, premenopausal women.Objective: Our objective was to assess the relationship between vitamin D and hormonal biomarkers, sporadic anovulation, menstrual cycle length, and premenstrual syndrome and its symptoms. We hypothesize that vitamin D will be inversely associated with aberrations in reproductive and gynecologic function.Methods: This was a prospective cohort of 1191 participants attempting to conceive, aged 18-40, with 1-2 prior pregnancy losses, no history of infertility, and enrolled in the EAGeR trial. Patients answered questionnaires regarding demographic information and gynecologic histories and serum samples were collected pre-randomization. Patients collected and froze daily first-void urine samples for up to two menstrual cycles. Patients were followed for risk of anovulation for two menstrual cycles and followed all together for up to six menstrual cycles.Results: Vitamin D was associated with free androgen index and sex hormone binding globulin concentration, but not total testosterone, free testosterone, or dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate. Vitamin D was negatively associated with estrone-1-glucoronide in urine but not with pregnanediol glucuronide. Vitamin D was not associated with menstrual cycle length or its phase components and was not associated with risk of sporadic anovulation. Vitamin D was associated with breast tenderness/fullness and generalized aches and pains during the premenstrual week but not with other symptoms or overall risk of PMS.Conclusions: Vitamin D may play a role in a host of reproductive and endocrine outcomes, including the bioavailability of androgens, concentrations of estrogens, and physical symptoms of PMS.


2006 ◽  
Vol 96 (5) ◽  
pp. 888-894 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Bryant ◽  
K. P. Truesdale ◽  
L. Dye

Food intake varies across the menstrual cycle in mammals, energy intake usually being greater in the premenstrual phase compared with the postmenstrual phase. Premenstrual increments in energy intake and a preferential selection of carbohydrate have been suggested to be greater in women with premenstrual syndrome (PMS), who may be more sensitive to cyclical hormonal or neurotransmitter fluctuations. This has direct implications for research within populations of women, especially where the primary outcome is diet or a change in energy balance. We aimed to determine whether: the premenstrual intake of energy and macronutrients differed from the postmenstrual intake; the change in intake across the menstrual cycle differed in women with PMS compared with controls; and the change in intake was related to the severity of premenstrual symptoms. We collected 3 d dietary intake data during the postmenstrual and premenstrual phases of the menstrual cycle in thirty-one women with PMS and twenty-seven control women. The consumption of energy and macronutrient intake were similar between the phases of the cycle in women with PMS. Conversely, intakes were usually greater premenstrually in control women, although not all differences were statistically significant. Exceptions were with non-milk extrinsic sugars and alcohol, which were both consumed in greater amounts in the premenstrual phase in women with PMS. Significant correlations were observed between the severity of symptoms and the change in the consumption of these nutrients. These data suggest that a consideration of the menstrual cycle phase and PMS in diet may not be warranted, especially in cross-sectional analysis, although it may need to be taken into account when examining change in intake during dietary interventions.


1984 ◽  
Vol 107 (3) ◽  
pp. 413-419 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Apter ◽  
N.J. Bolton ◽  
G. L. Hammond ◽  
R. Vihko

Abstract. Serum sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) concentrations were measured by an immunoradiometric assay, as part of a longitudinal study of puberty in girls, and were related to age. pubertal stage, age at menarche, weight, nature of the menstrual cycle and serum concentrations of sex steroids. A slow but very significant decrease was seen in SHBG from 77 nmol/l at 8–10 years of age to about 50 nmol/l after 15 years of age. Serum SHBG concentrations showed weak negative correlations with those of androstenedione and testosterone during puberty. The closest associations found between SHBG and the parameters measured were negative correlations with weight and body fat percentage in both pre-menarcheal and post-menarcheal girls, even after the effect of age was accounted for by calculating partial correlation coefficients. Girls who experienced early menarche (before 13.0 years) had lower SHBG but higher oestradiol serum concentrations at 10.0–15.9 years of age compared to girls with later menarche. In ovulatory menstrual cycles, a significant increase in SHBG was found from the early to the late part of the cycle, whereas no changes took place in anovulatory cycles. Serum concentrations of SHBG showed positive correlations with those of oestradiol and progesterone in specimens taken in the late part of the cycle. In view of the weak relationships between serum SHBG and sex steroid concentrations, and the strong relationships between SHBG, weight and body fat percentage, factors other than steroids have to be considered in the regulation of SHBG levels during puberty.


Author(s):  
Ludmila Zamrazilová ◽  
Marcela Dvořáková ◽  
Lidka Lisá ◽  
Luboslav Stárka ◽  
Richard Hampl

Abstract: Sex hormone-binding globulin biosynthesis is influenced by three hormonal systems: gonadal, insular and thyroid. Congenital adrenal hyperplasia is characterized by overproduction of adrenal androgens associated with impaired insulin sensitivity, hyperinsulinemia and often also with hypothyroidism. Only scarce data are available concerning congenital adrenal hyperplasia. The objective of this study was to determine the distribution of sex hormone-binding globulin and free testosterone levels in these patients and to what extent these values correlate with actual 17-hydroxyprogesterone and androstenedione levels, which are commonly used for monitoring of treatment effectiveness.: A total of 300 retrospective laboratory records of 78 males and boys and 456 records of 162 girls and premenopausal women with diagnosis of congenital adrenal hyperplasia under common substitution treatment were evaluated statistically. The data were divided artificially into groups of low, normal and high levels, with respect to physiological concentrations for each sex and age. The percentages of the total in each group were calculated.: Whereas an almost Gaussian distribution occurred for males, the data for females displayed a considerable shift to low sex hormone-binding globulin and accordingly high free testosterone levels. Sex hormone-binding globulin levels did not correlate with 17-hydroxyprogesterone.: Low sex hormone-binding globulin levels in congenital adrenal hyperplasia, at least in females, reflect their involvement in insular and eventually thyroid axes, rather than the effectiveness of substitution.


1960 ◽  
Vol XXXIII (IV) ◽  
pp. 494-500 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. G. Huis in 't Veld

ABSTRACT The excretion of Zimmermann chromogens was determined during 3 menstrual cycles in a woman with regular menstruation, suffering from Addison's disease following bilateral adrenalectomy. The 3 cycles investigated were normal (ovulatory) according to the conventional criteria. The medication given (DOCA, deoxycorticosterone-trimethyl-acetate (DOCTA), cortisone) gave rise to the excretion of small quantities of pregnanediol, pregnanolones and 11-oxygenated 17-ketosteroids in the urine. The progesterone produced in the corpus luteum gave rise to urinary excretion of pregnanediol and probably pregnanolones. The results obtained indicate that the ovarian secretion of precursors of 17-ketosteroids (17-hydroxyprogesterone and androst-4-en-3,17-dione) must be exceedingly small. No findings were obtained which indicate the existence of cyclic fluctuations in the ovarian secretion of precursors of neutral 17-ketosteroids.


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