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Objective sleep interruption and reproductive hormone dynamics in the menstrual cycle
Affiliation:1. Departments of Medicine and Psychiatry & Human Behavior, Alpert Medical School of Brown University/Rhode Island Hospital, 300 Duncan Drive, Providence, RI, USA;2. Division of Preventive and Behavioral Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, 55 Lake Avenue North, Shaw Building Room 228, Worcester, MA 01655, USA;3. Women’s Hormones and Aging Research Program, Department of Psychiatry, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 75 Francis Street, Boston, MA 02115, USA;4. Department of Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, 44 Binney Street, Boston, MA 02115, USA
Abstract:ObjectivesWomen report greater sleep disturbance during the premenstrual phase of the menstrual cycle and during menses. However, the putative hormonal basis of perceived menstrual cycle-related sleep disturbance has not been investigated directly. We examined associations of objective measures of sleep fragmentation with reproductive hormone levels in healthy, premenopausal women.MethodsTwenty-seven women with monthly menses had hormone levels measured at two time points during a single menstrual cycle: the follicular phase and the peri-ovulatory to mid-luteal phase. A single night of home polysomnography (PSG) was recorded on the day of the peri-ovulatory/mid-luteal-phase blood draw. Serum progesterone, estradiol, and estrone levels concurrent with PSG and rate of change in progesterone (PROGslope) from the follicular blood draw to PSG were correlated with log-transformed wake after sleep onset (lnWASO%) and number of wakes/hour of sleep (lnWake-Index) using linear regression.ResultsSleep was more fragmented in association with a steeper PROGslope (lnWASO% p = 0.016; lnWake-Index p = 0.08) and higher concurrent estrone level (lnWASO% p = 0.03; lnWake-Index p = 0.01), but the effect of estrone on WASO was lost after accounting for PROGslope. WASO% and Wake-Index were not associated with concomitant progesterone or estradiol levels.ConclusionsA steeper rate of rise in progesterone levels from the follicular phase through the mid-luteal phase was associated with significantly greater WASO, establishing a link between reproductive hormone dynamics and sleep fragmentation in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle.
Keywords:Menstrual cycle  Progesterone  Estradiol  Estrone  Sleep  Premenopausal  Polysomnography
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