The effect of physical activity across the menstrual cycle on reproductive function

Annals of epidemiology, 24(2), 127-134

DOI 10.17615/xeh5-9h86 Source

Abstract

Purpose

To evaluate the association between physical activity (PA) across the menstrual cycle and reproductive function.

Methods

The BioCycle Study (2005-2007) followed 259 healthy premenopausal women not using hormonal contraceptives for up to two menstrual cycles (N = 509 cycles). Serum leptin, estradiol, progesterone, luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, and testosterone were measured five to eight times per cycle. Linear mixed models were used to estimate the effect of past-week PA (measured four times during each cycle) on hormone levels. Past-week PA was categorized into tertiles based on metabolic equivalent of task hours per week (cut-points were 15.3 and 35.7). Risk ratios for sporadic anovulation were estimated using generalized linear models. Analyses adjusted for habitual PA (assessed at baseline), body mass index, race, age, and perceived stress. Linear mixed models used inverse probability weights to control for concurrent reproductive hormones and caloric intake.

Results

High past-week PA was inversely associated with leptin (-6.6%; 95% confidence interval, -10.6 to -2.5) and luteal phase progesterone (-22.1%; -36.2 to -4.7) as compared with low past-week PA. High past-week PA was not significantly associated with sporadic anovulation (adjusted risk ratio, 1.5; 0.6 to 3.4).

Conclusions

High levels of PA were modestly associated with changes in select hormones but not sporadic anovulation among moderate to highly active premenopausal women.

Topics

physical activity menstrual cycle reproductive hormones, exercise effect luteal phase progesterone levels, BioCycle Study menstrual cycle biomarkers physical activity, sporadic anovulation exercise premenopausal women, leptin physical activity menstrual cycle association, Mumford Schisterman BioCycle hormonal variation, vigorous exercise ovulatory function healthy women, metabolic equivalent physical activity reproductive function, exercise estradiol progesterone LH FSH menstrual cycle, premenopausal women physical activity hormone disruption
DOI 10.17615/xeh5-9h86 10.17615/xeh5-9h86

Cite this article

Ahrens, K. A., Vladutiu, C. J., Mumford, S. L., Schliep, K. C., Perkins, N. J., Wactawski-Wende, J., & Schisterman, E. F. (2014). The effect of physical activity across the menstrual cycle on reproductive function. *Annals of epidemiology*, *24*(2), 127-134. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.annepidem.2013.11.002

Related articles