Ask a woman if her period affects her body beyond
the reproductive system and she'll probably answer
with a resounding yes. This seemingly basic question
is now being asked by numerous investigators in various
areas of women's health research. From the timing
of mammograms to the mind-altering effects of drugs,
researchers are now learning that the hormonal swings
during a woman's menstrual cycle affect more than
just reproduction, like metabolism rates and pain.
A woman's menstrual cycle starts when menses flow
begins, is followed by the follicular phase when estrogen
rises and peaks at ovulation mid-cycle, then ends
with the luteal phase when progesterone dominates.
Until recently,
researchers didn't include women in significant numbers
in clinical trials, let alone consider the effects
of menstrual cycles on female health.1
Several pieces of history combine to explain this
lack of attention, says John M. Johnson, a physiology
professor at the University of Texas Health Science
Center, San Antonio, who studies hormonal effects
on body temperature regulation. "One is the overall
assumption that reproductive hormones had to do with
reproduction, period, until it became obvious that
these hormones have global effects." Ironically,
he says, past studies relied on men as subjects, and
not women, to avoid the confounding aspect of the
menstrual cycle. Johnson says that this was why he
hadn't considered fluctuating-female hormones as a
factor. "Then when we got into it, we found it
was really interesting in its own right," he
says. Five years ago, his graduate student Nisha Charkoudian,
who is now at the Mayo Clinic, found that two different
nerve types in the skin were affected by a woman's
hormonal status during different parts of her cycle,
changing how and where body temperature is regulated.2
Some say that the reason the
menstrual cycle hasn't been considered until lately
is that it's a culturally forbidden subject among
men and women. "I think it was taboo and I think
it still is fairly taboo, especially in American culture,"
says Susan Brown, a psychology professor at the University
of Hawaii, Hilo. "We're bleeding and nobody wants
to even think or talk about that."
Now imagine conducting a similar
study of acupuncture. Unlike a pharmaceutical drug,
acupuncture technique varies among practitioners.
Will participants in the trial receive Chinese acupuncture,
or will they get the Japanese or Korean variety? Which
acupuncture points will therapists target on the patients’
bodies? How far will they insert their needles? Will
they twist the needles or apply electrical currents,
or will they simply apply physical pressure?
For women, it's good that researchers
have begun talking about, and researching, how the
menstrual cycle can affect them. In 1998, epidemiologist
Emily White and colleagues from the Fred Hutchison
Cancer Center, Seattle, found that mammograms detect
cancer more effectively in premenopausal women during
the cycle's first two weeks.3 In the latter
half, breast tissue becomes more fibrous and thus
opaque -most likely due to hormonal fluctuations-
so it is harder to detect small, early-stage malignancies.
And several retrospective studies conducted in the
United States and Europe during the early 1990s found
that high progesterone levels expressed during the
luteal phase might contribute to better survival after
breast cancer surgery, concluding that the best time
for surgery was just after ovulation when estrogen
is low and progesterone is rising.
Other systems
Many potential, non-reproductive connections between
women's health and menstrual cycle are being studied:
metabolic rate, temperature regulation, pain, gastrointestinal
function, reaction to insulin in diabetics, and immune
function. Susan Manzi, an associate professor of medicine
and epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh, notes
that 60 percent of women with the autoimmune disease
lupus report adverse symptoms suggestive of disease
activity during certain times of their cycle.4
"But, the bottom line is that very little is
truly known," she adds.
So far, much of the information
has been anecdotal, reported by female lupus sufferers
that some change occurs in disease activity during
certain times of their cycle, but the timing isn't
consistent among all women. Many say their symptoms
worsen at the start of the luteal phase, at ovulation,
when progesterone is at its lowest and estrogen is
at its highest. But, the data on lupus activity and
sex hormones are conflicting.
Herb studies are less daunting,
but they, too, present challenges. To design a rigorous
echinacea study, researchers would have to settle
on one species of the herb (three are in widespread
use). They would also have to use plants of a specified
age, and decide how to prepare and store them. A liquid
extract might have different effects from dried, crushed
leaves.
Manzi is now studying whether
women with lupus have significantly different sex-hormone
profiles during their menstrual cycle. One hypothesis
she is working with is that estradiol levels during
the follicular phase and at ovulation are higher in
women with lupus than age- and race-matched controls,
and that progesterone levels during the luteal phase
are lower. "Since estradiol tends to have more
of an immunostimulatory effect and progesterone may
have more immunosuppressive characteristics, variations
in the levels of these hormones during the menstrual
cycle may be important," she says.
In the early 1990s, Margie
Profet, an evolutionary biologist, introduced the
controversial idea that menstruation was a way of
ridding the body of pathogens to facilitate a clean
implantation for a fertilized embryo.5
Based on this idea, Brown reasoned that during menses,
the immune system would be heightened to clear the
uterus and fallopian tubes of any bacteria, as Profet
suggested, but at the time of implantation in the
luteal phase, immune function would decrease because
sperm and the embryo might be picked up by the immune
system as nonself pathogens. "Our hypothesis
was that during the follicular phase, women would
experience fewer health problems and then during the
luteal phase we expected them to experience more,"
says Brown.
And they did. Based on
the daily diaries of 59 women, who, for three cycles,
kept note of general symptoms like runny noses, pimples,
herpes cold sore outbreaks, flu-like ailments, and
sore throats, Brown found that the participants displayed
significantly fewer onsets and contractions of illness
during menses. In contrast, the onset of symptoms
and contractions of illness peaked during the luteal
phase. For example, subjects reported cold symptoms
coming on the week before menstruation started.6 Manzi
plans to next look at the levels of antibodies and
time of cycle.
It's Not All in Her Head
Courtesy of Marc J. Kaufman
Ischemic
pain responses across the menstrual cycle
Another
area primarily relying on anecdotal information concerns
the relationship between pain and the menstrual cycle.
For example, Linda A. LeResche, research professor in
the department of oral medicine, University of Washington,
Seattle, says that researchers "know nothing about
clinical pain and cycle with the exception of migraine
headache." It's been known for a while that for
some migraine sufferers, the headaches come right before,
or at the onset of, menstruation.7
LeResche studies temporomandibular
disorders, or TMD, which is characterized by pain in
the joint at the front of the ear, called the temporomandibular
joint, and the jaw muscles. She and others have noticed
that TMD affects women more frequently; its prevalence
peaks during reproductive years, and symptoms seem to
decline after age 50. As with Manzi and her lupus work,
LeResche naturally deduced a connection with reproductive
hormones. She is currently looking at that relationship.
Roger B. Fillingim, a clinical
psychologist and associate professor in the College
of Dentistry, University of Florida, Gainesville, also
studies how women's perception of pain varies across
the cycle. He's currently recruiting women for a study
that will look at how interstitial cystitis, a painful
bladder condition characterized by increased urinary
urgency and frequency, is possibly exacerbated just
prior to menstruation. Fillingim's hypothesis: enhanced
pain before menstruation occurs because sex hormones
affect the neurons in the brain and spinal cord that
transmit pain-related information.8
Another area involving pain is the relationship between
bowel disorders and menstrual cycle. "No one has
actually measured ovarian hormones and compared them
against gastrointestinal symptoms," says Margaret
M. Heitkemper, professor and chairperson, department
of biobehavioral nursing and health systems, and director,
Center for Women's Health Research, University of Washington.
Nonetheless, she adds, the evidence is "fairly
compelling" that for many women, there is a heightening
of symptoms in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and other
GI tract ailments that occur around the time of menses.9,10
Heitkemper's ongoing study
is one of the first to look at the relationship between
the entire cycle and IBS, although others looked at
symptom amplification at the onset of menses. "My
own theory is that it's related to the hormone drop
that occurs right before menses, for both progesterone
and estrogen," she says. "Those hormones drop
off during the late luteal phase, and I think it makes
the gut more responsive to normal stimuli. We've shown
in rats that estrogen slows down motility in gastric
emptying."
As researchers change their
attitudes regarding the purported difficulty in data
analysis due to women's menstrual cycles, investigators
from many fields are finally making strides in understanding
just how important the inclusion of menstrual cycle
fluctuations really is. And it's just not research that's
benefiting. "I think for many years women were
reluctant to talk about symptoms that varied with their
cycle," says Heitkemper. "We are beginning
to appreciate the full impact of these distressing symptoms
that vary with the cycle."
Karen
Young Kreeger (kykreeger@aol.com)
is a contributing editor for The Scientist.
References
1. K.Y. Kreeger, "Women health activists note progress
but still see problems," The Scientist, 10[23]:1
Nov. 25, 1996.
2. N. Charkoudian and J.M. Johnson, "Female reproductive
hormones and thermoregulatory control of skin blood
flow," Exercise and Sports Science Reviews, 28:108-12,
2000.
3. E. White et al., "Variation in mammographic
breast density by time in menstrual cycle among women
age 40-49 years," Journal of the National Cancer
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4. A.D. Steinberg and B.J. Steinberg, "Lupus disease
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5. M. Profet, "Menstruation as a defense against
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6. S.G. Brown et al., "The relation between phase
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9. M.M. Heitkemper et al., "Daily gastrointestinal
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10. M.D. Crowell et al., "Functional bowel disorders
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