Center for Health Sciences, SRI International, Menlo Park, California, USA.
Division of Education, SRI International, Menlo Park, California, USA.
J Biol Rhythms. 2024 Oct;39(5):395-412. doi: 10.1177/07487304241265018. Epub 2024 Aug 6.
Most studies about the menstrual cycle are laboratory-based, in small samples, with infrequent sampling, and limited to young individuals. Here, we use wearable and diary-based data to investigate menstrual phase and age effects on finger temperature, sleep, heart rate (HR), physical activity, physical symptoms, and mood. A total of 116 healthy females, without menstrual disorders, were enrolled: 67 young (18-35 years, reproductive stage) and 53 midlife (42-55 years, late reproductive to menopause transition). Over one menstrual cycle, participants wore Oura ring Gen2 to detect finger temperature, HR, heart rate variability (root mean square of successive differences between normal heartbeats [RMSSD]), steps, and sleep. They used luteinizing hormone (LH) kits and daily rated sleep, mood, and physical symptoms. A cosinor rhythm analysis was applied to detect menstrual oscillations in temperature. The effect of menstrual cycle phase and group on all other variables was assessed using hierarchical linear models. Finger temperature followed an oscillatory trend indicative of ovulatory cycles in 96 participants. In the midlife group, the temperature rhythm's mesor was higher, but period, amplitude, and number of days between menses and acrophase were similar in both groups. In those with oscillatory temperatures, HR was lowest during menses in both groups. In the young group only, RMSSD was lower in the late-luteal phase than during menses. Overall, RMSSD was lower, and number of daily steps was higher, in the midlife group. No significant menstrual cycle changes were detected in wearable-derived or self-reported measures of sleep efficiency, duration, wake-after-sleep onset, sleep onset latency, or sleep quality. Mood positivity was higher around ovulation, and physical symptoms manifested during menses. Temperature and HR changed across the menstrual cycle; however, sleep measures remained stable in these healthy young and midlife individuals. Further work should investigate over longer periods whether individual- or cluster-specific sleep changes exist, and if a buffering mechanism protects sleep from physiological changes across the menstrual cycle.
大多数关于月经周期的研究都是基于实验室的,样本量小,采样频率低,并且仅限于年轻人。在这里,我们使用可穿戴设备和日记数据来研究月经周期和年龄对指尖温度、睡眠、心率(HR)、身体活动、身体症状和情绪的影响。共有 116 名健康女性(无月经紊乱)参与研究:67 名年轻女性(18-35 岁,生育期)和 53 名中年女性(42-55 岁,生育后期至绝经过渡期)。在一个月经周期内,参与者佩戴 Oura ring Gen2 来检测指尖温度、HR、心率变异性(正常心跳之间连续差异的均方根 [RMSSD])、步数和睡眠。她们使用促黄体激素(LH)试剂盒和每天自评睡眠、情绪和身体症状。应用余弦振子分析来检测温度的月经波动。使用分层线性模型评估月经周期阶段和组对所有其他变量的影响。在 96 名参与者中,指尖温度呈现出与排卵周期一致的波动趋势。在中年组中,温度节律的中值较高,但两组之间的周期、振幅和月经与顶点之间的天数相似。在有波动温度的人中,两组的 HR 在月经期间最低。仅在年轻组中,黄体晚期的 RMSSD 低于月经期间。总体而言,中年组的 RMSSD 较低,每日步数较高。在可穿戴设备或自我报告的睡眠效率、持续时间、睡眠后醒来时间、入睡潜伏期或睡眠质量方面,没有发现明显的月经周期变化。在排卵期间,情绪积极度较高,而身体症状在月经期间出现。温度和 HR 在月经周期中发生变化;然而,这些健康的年轻和中年个体的睡眠测量值保持稳定。进一步的研究应在更长的时间内调查是否存在个体或群体特异性的睡眠变化,以及是否有缓冲机制保护睡眠免受月经周期中生理变化的影响。