Normal menstrual cycle Flashcards
What are the two phases of the endometrial cycle?
1) Proliferative
2) Secretory
What happens during the proliferative phase?
- Occurs after menses, this is when the endometrium thickens again
What happens during the secretory phase?
- Occurs after ovulation, growth of the endometrium stops and the glands become more active and full of secretions
What are the phases of the ovarian cycle?
1) Follicular phase
2) Ovulation
3) Luteal (or post-ovulatory) phase
Which part of the ovarian cycle has a constant length? Which varies?
- The Luteal phase is constant at 14 days
- Variation in cycle length is due to the follicular phase (longer time until ovulation)
What is follicle stimulating hormone? Where is it produced? What signals for its production?
- Stimulates the growth of follicles and stimulates sex hormone secretion (predominantly estradiol)
- Produced in anterior pituitary
- Signalled by gonadatrophin releaseing hormone (GnRH)
What is luteinizing hormone?
- Stimulates sex hormone production (Testosterone), which is subsequently converted to Estradiol by action of FSH
- Plays essential role in ovulation (LH surge just prior to ovulation causes rupture of mature follicle and oocyte release)
What is a graafian follicle?
- A mature follicle in a mammalian ovary that contains a liquid-filled cavity and that ruptures during ovulation to release an egg
What is ovulation?
- Rapid enlargement of the follicle, followed by protrusion from the surface of the ovarian cortex and rupture of the follicle with extrusion of the oocyte
What is mittelschmerz?
A pain felt just prior to follicular rupture in either illiac fossa
How is the corpus luteum formed? What does it do?
- The remainder of the graafian follicle, which is retained in the ovary, becomes the corpus luteum
- This structure is a major source of estrogen and progesterone secreted in the post-ovulatory phase
When in the cycle do you test serum progesterone levels to investigate fertility? Why?
- Day 21: Serum progesterone secreted by the corpus luteum peaks 7 days after ovulation (day 21 in 28 day cycle)
- Therefore a day 21 level can allow you to assess if ovulation has occured
Hormonally, what causes menses?
- If no conception occurs, the corpus luteum breaks down. This decreases levels of progesterone causing menses
What hormone sustains the corpus luteum during pregnancy? How do we take advantage of this in testing?
- Beta human chorionic gonadotrophin (BhCG)
- Used in pregnancy tests
What are the two layers of the endometrium? Which layer(s) are shed during menstruation?
1) Superficial layer - shed during menses
2) Basal layer - does not shed and is the foundation on which superficial layer rebuilds following menses