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Interuniversity Project on Reproductive Endocrinology in Women and Exercise: 1 Department of Applied and Experimental Reproductive Endocrinology, The Institute for Gyneco-Endocrinological Research, Leuven 3, Belgium; 2 Department of Biochemical and Clinical Endocrinology, Medical University of Lübeck, D-23538 Lübeck, Germany; and 3 Department of Movement Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Maastricht, NL-6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands
Received 22 July 1996; accepted in final form 28 October 1996.
De Crée, Carl, Peter Ball, Bärbel Seidlitz,
Gerrit Van Kranenburg, Peter Geurten, and Hans A. Keizer. Plasma
2-hydroxycatecholestrogen responses to acute submaximal and maximal
exercise in untrained women. J. Appl.
Physiol. 82(1): 364-370, 1997.
Exercise-induced menstrual problems are accompanied by an increase in catecholestrogen (CE) formation. It has been hypothesized that hypoestrogenemia may be
secondary to an increased turnover from estrogens to CE, which then may
disrupt luteinizing hormone release. In addition, the strong affinity
of CE for the catecholamine-deactivating enzyme catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT)
has led to speculations about their possible role in safeguarding
norepinephrine from premature decomposition during exercise. We
investigated whether acute exercise on a cycle ergometer produces any
changes in CE homeostasis. Nine untrained eumenorrheic women (body fat,
24.8 ± 3.1%) volunteered for this study. Baseline plasma CE
averages for total 2-hydroxyestrogens (2-OHE) were 218 ± 29 (SE)
pg/ml during the follicular phase (FPh) and 420 ± 58 pg/ml during
the luteal phase (LPh). 2-Methoxyestrogens (2-MeOE) measured 257 ± 17 pg/ml in the FPh and 339 ± 39 pg/ml in the LPh. During
incremental exercise, total estrogens (E) increased, but 2-OHE and
2-MeOE levels did not significantly change in either phase. The 2-OHE/E
ratio (measure of CE turnover) decreased during exercise in both
menstrual phases, whereas the 2-MeOE/2-OHE ratio (correlates with COMT
activity) did not significantly change. These findings suggest that
there is insufficient evidence to conclude that brief incremental
exercise in untrained eumenorrheic females acutely produces increased
CE formation.
amenorrhea; catecholamines; catechol-O-methyltransferase; estrogens; menstrual cycle
This article has been cited by other articles:
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C. De Cree, P. Ball, B. Seidlitz, G. Van Kranenburg, P. Geurten, and H. A. Keizer Effects of a training program on resting plasma 2-hydroxycatecholestrogen levels in eumenorrheic women J Appl Physiol, November 1, 1997; 83(5): 1551 - 1556. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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