Yahiro J, Glass A R, Fears W B, Ferguson E W, Vigersky R A
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1987 Mar;156(3):586-91. doi: 10.1016/0002-9378(87)90058-5.
Most studies of exercise-induced amenorrhea have compared amenorrheic athletes (usually runners) with sedentary control subjects. Such comparisons will identify hormonal changes that develop as a result of exercise training but cannot determine which of these changes play a role in causing amenorrhea. To obviate this problem, we assessed reproductive hormone status in a group of five amenorrheic runners and compared them to a group of six eumenorrheic runners matched for body fatness, training intensity, and exercise performance. Compared to the eumenorrheic runners, the amenorrheic runners had lower serum estradiol concentrations, similar basal serum luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone concentrations, and exaggerated responses of serum gonadotropins after administration of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (100 micrograms intravenous bolus). Serum prolactin levels, both basally and after thyrotropin-releasing hormone administration (500 micrograms intravenous bolus) or treadmill exercise, was similar in the two groups, as were serum thyroid function tests (including thyrotropin response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone). Changes in serum cortisol levels after short-term treadmill exercise were similar in both groups, and serum testosterone levels increased after exercise only in the eumenorrheic group. In neither group did such exercise change serum luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, or thyrotropin levels. We concluded that exercise-induced amenorrhea is not solely related to the development of increased prolactin output after exercise training. The exaggerated gonadotropin response to luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone seen in amenorrheic runners in comparison with matched eumenorrheic runners is consistent with a hypothalamic etiology for the menstrual dysfunction, analogous to that previously described in "stress-induced" or "psychogenic" amenorrhea.
大多数关于运动性闭经的研究都是将闭经的运动员(通常是跑步运动员)与久坐不动的对照受试者进行比较。这样的比较能够识别出因运动训练而产生的激素变化,但无法确定这些变化中哪些在导致闭经方面起作用。为了避免这个问题,我们评估了一组五名闭经跑步运动员的生殖激素状态,并将他们与一组六名月经正常的跑步运动员进行比较,这两组运动员在体脂、训练强度和运动表现方面相匹配。与月经正常的跑步运动员相比,闭经的跑步运动员血清雌二醇浓度较低,基础血清促黄体生成素和促卵泡生成素浓度相似,在注射促黄体生成素释放激素(100微克静脉推注)后血清促性腺激素反应过度。两组的基础血清催乳素水平以及在注射促甲状腺激素释放激素(500微克静脉推注)或跑步机运动后的血清催乳素水平相似,血清甲状腺功能测试(包括促甲状腺激素对促甲状腺激素释放激素的反应)也是如此。两组在短期跑步机运动后血清皮质醇水平的变化相似,且仅在月经正常的组中运动后血清睾酮水平升高。在两组中,这种运动均未改变血清促黄体生成素、促卵泡生成素或促甲状腺激素水平。我们得出结论,运动性闭经不仅仅与运动训练后催乳素分泌增加的发展有关。与匹配的月经正常的跑步运动员相比,闭经的跑步运动员中促性腺激素对促黄体生成素释放激素的反应过度,这与月经功能障碍的下丘脑病因一致,类似于先前在“应激性”或“心因性”闭经中所描述的情况。