Journal of Applied Physiology AJP: Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology
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J Appl Physiol 92: 1684-1691, 2002. First published December 7, 2001; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00919.2001
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Vol. 92, Issue 4, 1684-1691, April 2002

Acetaminophen does not affect 24-h body temperature or sleep in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle

Fiona C. Baker1, Helen S. Driver1, Janice Paiker1,2, Geoffrey G. Rogers1, and Duncan Mitchell1

1 Wits Sleep Laboratory, Brain Function Research Unit, School of Physiology, University of the Witwatersrand, and 2 Department of Chemical Pathology, South African Institute for Medical Research, Johannesburg 2193, South Africa

Body temperature and sleep change in association with increased progesterone in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle in young women. The mechanism by which progesterone raises body temperature is not known but may involve prostaglandins, inducing a thermoregulatory adjustment similar to that of fever. Prostaglandins also are involved in sleep regulation and potentially could mediate changes in sleep during the menstrual cycle. We investigated the possible role of central prostaglandins in mediating menstrual-associated 24-h temperature and sleep changes by inhibiting prostaglandin synthesis with a therapeutic dose of the centrally acting cyclooxygenase inhibitor acetaminophen in the luteal and follicular phases of the menstrual cycle in young women. Body temperature was raised, and nocturnal amplitude was blunted, in the luteal phase compared with the follicular phase. Acetaminophen had no effect on the body temperature profile in either menstrual cycle phase. Prostaglandins, therefore, are unlikely to mediate the upward shift of body temperature in the luteal phase. Sleep changed during the menstrual cycle: on the placebo night in the luteal phase the women had less rapid eye movement sleep and more slow-wave sleep than in the follicular phase. Acetaminophen did not alter sleep architecture or subjective sleep quality. Prostaglandin inhibition with acetaminophen, therefore, had no effect on the increase in body temperature or on sleep in the midluteal phase of the menstrual cycle in young women, making it unlikely that central prostaglandin synthesis underlies these luteal events.

paracetamol; progesterone; rapid eye movement sleep; slow-wave sleep


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S. S. Ayoub, R. M. Botting, S. Goorha, P. R. Colville-Nash, D. A. Willoughby, and L. R. Ballou
Acetaminophen-induced hypothermia in mice is mediated by a prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase 1 gene-derived protein
PNAS, July 27, 2004; 101(30): 11165 - 11169.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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