Women's Exercise and Bone Health Laboratory, Graduate Department of Exercise Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Sports Med. 2009;39(12):1055-69. doi: 10.2165/11317910-000000000-00000.
To date, the predominant mechanism underlying menstrual disturbances in exercising women supports an underlying energy deficiency-related aetiology, in which a failure to compensate dietary intake for the energy cost of exercise suppresses reproductive function. Increasing evidence demonstrates that energy deficiency plays a causal role in the induction of amenorrhoea in exercising women, and consistent with this mechanism are findings of glucoregulatory perturbations such as low triiodothyronine, reduced insulin secretion and elevated cortisol, growth hormone and ghrelin levels. The menstrual disturbance that may differ in its energetic characteristics and, perhaps in its androgenic and ovarian steroid environment, is oligomenorrhoea. We conducted a systematic review of the literature to begin to understand whether oligomenorrhoea in exercising women is a mild subclinical phenotype of polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) in which exercise is conferring beneficial effects in protecting women from the classic PCOS phenotype, or whether oligomenorrhoea is part of the spectrum of menstrual disturbances caused by an energy deficiency that is often reported in exercising women with menstrual disturbances. We included observational, randomized controlled trials and cross-sectional studies that reported clinical, hormonal and metabolic profiles in exercising women with amenorrhoea or oligomenorrhoea and in women with PCOS. Previous studies examining the underlying mechanisms and consequences of exercise-associated menstrual disturbances have grouped exercising amenorrhoeic and oligomenorrhoeic women into a single group, and have relied primarily on self-reported menstrual history. Although scarce, the data available to date suggest that hyperandrogenism, such as that observed in PCOS, may likely be associated with oligomenorrhoea in exercising women, and may not always represent hypothalamic inhibition secondary to an energy deficiency. It is critical to closely examine the metabolic and endocrine status of women with menstrual disturbances because the treatment strategies for energy deficiency-related menstrual disturbances differ from that of disturbances traceable to hyperandrogenaemia. Further investigation is necessary to explore whether different endocrine aetiologies underly menstrual disturbances, particularly oligomenorrhoea, in physically active women.
迄今为止,导致运动女性月经紊乱的主要机制支持一种潜在的能量缺乏相关病因,即未能通过运动的能量消耗来补偿饮食摄入,从而抑制了生殖功能。越来越多的证据表明,能量缺乏在运动女性闭经的诱导中起因果作用,与这种机制一致的是发现了糖调节紊乱,如三碘甲状腺原氨酸降低、胰岛素分泌减少和皮质醇、生长激素和 ghrelin 水平升高。月经紊乱在能量特征上可能有所不同,而且其雄激素和卵巢类固醇环境也可能不同,这种情况被称为稀发排卵。我们对文献进行了系统回顾,开始了解运动女性的稀发排卵是多囊卵巢综合征(PCOS)的轻度亚临床表型,还是运动赋予了女性保护自己免受经典 PCOS 表型影响的有益效果,或者稀发排卵是运动女性经常报告的能量缺乏引起的月经紊乱谱的一部分。我们纳入了观察性、随机对照试验和横断面研究,这些研究报告了闭经或稀发排卵的运动女性以及 PCOS 女性的临床、激素和代谢特征。以前研究运动相关月经紊乱的潜在机制和后果的研究将运动性闭经和稀发排卵的女性分为一组,并主要依赖于自我报告的月经史。尽管数据很少,但迄今为止的数据表明,高雄激素血症,如 PCOS 中观察到的,可能与运动女性的稀发排卵有关,而且不一定总是代表能量缺乏引起的下丘脑抑制。仔细检查月经紊乱女性的代谢和内分泌状态至关重要,因为与能量缺乏相关的月经紊乱的治疗策略与归因于高雄激素血症的月经紊乱的治疗策略不同。需要进一步研究以探讨不同的内分泌病因是否导致运动女性的月经紊乱,特别是稀发排卵。