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月经周期对运动代谢的影响:对生育期女性运动表现的影响。

The effect of the menstrual cycle on exercise metabolism: implications for exercise performance in eumenorrhoeic women.

机构信息

School of Physiology, University of the Witwatersrand Medical School, Johannesburg, South Africa.

出版信息

Sports Med. 2010 Mar 1;40(3):207-27. doi: 10.2165/11317090-000000000-00000.

Abstract

The female hormones, oestrogen and progesterone, fluctuate predictably across the menstrual cycle in naturally cycling eumenorrhoeic women. Other than reproductive function, these hormones influence many other physiological systems, and their action during exercise may have implications for exercise performance. Although a number of studies have found exercise performance - and in particular, endurance performance - to vary between menstrual phases, there is an equal number of such studies reporting no differences. However, a comparison of the increase in the oestrogen concentration (E) relative to progesterone concentration (P) as the E/P ratio (pmol/nmol) in the luteal phase in these studies reveals that endurance performance may only be improved in the mid-luteal phase compared with the early follicular phase when the E/P ratio is high in the mid-luteal phase. Furthermore, the late follicular phase, characterized by the pre-ovulatory surge in oestrogen and suppressed progesterone concentrations, tends to promote improved performance in a cycling time trial and future studies should include this menstrual phase. Menstrual phase variations in endurance performance may largely be a consequence of changes to exercise metabolism stimulated by the fluctuations in ovarian hormone concentrations. The literature suggests that oestrogen may promote endurance performance by altering carbohydrate, fat and protein metabolism, with progesterone often appearing to act antagonistically. Details of the ovarian hormone influences on the metabolism of these macronutrients are no longer only limited to evidence from animal research and indirect calorimetry but have been verified by substrate kinetics determined with stable tracer methodology in eumenorrhoeic women. This review thoroughly examines the metabolic perturbations induced by the ovarian hormones and, by detailed comparison, proposes reasons for many of the inconsistent reports in menstrual phase comparative research. Often the magnitude of increase in the ovarian hormones between menstrual phases and the E/P ratio appear to be important factors determining an effect on metabolism. However, energy demand and nutritional status may be confounding variables, particularly in carbohydrate metabolism. The review specifically considers how changes in metabolic responses due to the ovarian hormones may influence exercise performance. For example, oestrogen promotes glucose availability and uptake into type I muscle fibres providing the fuel of choice during short duration exercise; an action that can be inhibited by progesterone. A high oestrogen concentration in the luteal phase augments muscle glycogen storage capacity compared with the low oestrogen environment of the early follicular phase. However, following a carbo-loading diet will super-compensate muscle glycogen stores in the early follicular phase to values attained in the luteal phase. Oestrogen concentrations of the luteal phase reduce reliance on muscle glycogen during exercise and although not as yet supported by human tracer studies, oestrogen increases free fatty acid availability and oxidative capacity in exercise, favouring endurance performance. Evidence of oestrogen's stimulation of 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase may explain many of the metabolic actions of oestrogen. However, both oestrogen and progesterone suppress gluconeogenic output during exercise and this may compromise performance in the latter stages of ultra-long events if energy replacement supplements are inadequate. Moreover, supplementing energy intake during exercise with protein may be more relevant when progesterone concentration is elevated compared with menstrual phases favouring a higher relative oestrogen concentration, as progesterone promotes protein catabolism while oestrogen suppresses protein catabolism. Furthermore, prospective research ideas for furthering the understanding of the impact of the menstrual cycle on metabolism and exercise performance are highlighted.

摘要

女性激素雌激素和孕激素在自然周期的正常月经周期中可预测地波动。除了生殖功能外,这些激素还影响许多其他生理系统,它们在运动中的作用可能对运动表现有影响。尽管许多研究发现运动表现-特别是耐力表现-在月经周期的不同阶段有所不同,但也有同样数量的研究报告没有差异。然而,比较这些研究中黄体期雌激素浓度(E)相对于孕激素浓度(P)的增加(E/P 比值(pmol/nmol))表明,与卵泡早期相比,只有在黄体中期 E/P 比值较高时,耐力表现才会得到改善。此外,卵泡晚期,以雌激素的预排卵激增和孕激素浓度的抑制为特征,往往会促进在周期性计时试验中的表现改善,未来的研究应该包括这个月经阶段。耐力表现的月经周期变化可能主要是由于卵巢激素浓度波动引起的运动代谢变化的结果。文献表明,雌激素可能通过改变碳水化合物、脂肪和蛋白质代谢来促进耐力表现,而孕激素通常表现出拮抗作用。关于这些宏量营养素的卵巢激素影响的详细信息不再仅限于动物研究和间接测热法的证据,而是通过稳定示踪剂方法在正常月经周期妇女中测定的底物动力学得到了验证。本综述全面检查了卵巢激素引起的代谢扰动,并通过详细比较,提出了许多月经周期比较研究中不一致报告的原因。通常,卵巢激素在月经周期之间的增加幅度和 E/P 比值似乎是决定对代谢影响的重要因素。然而,能量需求和营养状况可能是混杂变量,特别是在碳水化合物代谢中。该综述特别考虑了由于卵巢激素而导致的代谢反应变化如何影响运动表现。例如,雌激素促进葡萄糖的可用性和摄取到 I 型肌肉纤维中,为短时间运动提供首选燃料;这种作用可以被孕激素抑制。黄体期的高雌激素浓度与卵泡早期的低雌激素环境相比,增加了肌肉糖原储存能力。然而,在进行碳水化合物负荷饮食后,早期卵泡期的肌肉糖原储存会超补偿到黄体期的值。黄体期的雌激素浓度降低了运动中对肌肉糖原的依赖,尽管还没有得到人类示踪剂研究的支持,但雌激素会增加运动中的游离脂肪酸可用性和氧化能力,有利于耐力表现。雌激素刺激 5'-AMP 激活蛋白激酶的证据可以解释雌激素的许多代谢作用。然而,雌激素和孕激素在运动期间都抑制糖异生输出,如果能量替代补充不足,这可能会在超长事件的后期阶段影响表现。此外,与月经周期有利于较高相对雌激素浓度的阶段相比,在孕激素浓度升高时,在运动中用蛋白质补充能量摄入可能更相关,因为孕激素促进蛋白质分解代谢,而雌激素抑制蛋白质分解代谢。此外,还强调了进一步了解月经周期对代谢和运动表现影响的前瞻性研究思路。

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