hormonal cycle and cycle control Flashcards

1
Q

Menarche to menopause

how many oocytes at birth?
how many at menarche?

A

Menarche: 12.5
Menopause: 51.4

Birth: 1 million primordial follicles – oocyte arrested in prophase of first meiotic division
Menarche: 300,000-400,000 oocytes due to atresia

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2
Q

Hypothalamus

A

GnRH (pulsatile release; 70-90 min intervals–>drives cycle)
-produced by Arcuate nucleus
Pulsatile
70-90 minute intervals

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3
Q

Pituitary

A

Gonadotropins: FSH and LH
Anterior pituitary gland
Negative feedback

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4
Q

ovary has ??

A

Follicles
Estradiol:
Negative feedback effect on FSH
Positive feedback LH days 12-14 (otherwise negative feedback)
High level Estrogen
Progesterone: Negative feedback on FSH and LH

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5
Q

ovarian cells

A

FSH–>Granulosa cells–>Estradiol

LH–>Theca cells–>Androgen

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6
Q

Menstrual cycle

A

Follicular phase
Ovulation
Luteal phase

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7
Q

Menstrual cycle: follicular phase: Day 1

A

Day 1: first day of bleeding
Progesterone withdrawal
Prostaglandins released  contractions  ischemic pain (“cramping”)

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8
Q

Menstrual cycle: follicular phase

A
Hormones are all at their lowest point
Decrease in negative feedback-->FSH production
New follicles mature
Dominant follicle selected
Granulosa cells increase-->  estradiol
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9
Q

Menstrual cycle: follicular phase

A

Estradiol–> LH receptors on theca cells–> androgens  aromatase–> estradiol

Rising estradiol–> increase in negative feedback–> decrease in FSH/increase in LH

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10
Q

Dominant follicle

A

FSH binds to receptors on granulosa cells–>proliferation–>increased binding FSH–>estradiol

Follicle with the greatest # granulosa cells = dominant follicle = ovulation (the rest don’t ovulate)

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11
Q

Menstrual cycle: ovulation

A
Estradiol  positive feedback  LH
LH surge day 11-13
Ovulation occurs 30-36 hours after
Oocyte is expelled from follicle
Follicle becomes corpus luteum (no egg)
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12
Q

Menstrual cycle: luteal phase

A

Progesterone dominant (from corpus luteum)
Maximum production 3-4 days after ovulation, lasts 11 days
If no implantation–>involution of CL (13-14 days)–>decline in progesterone
If + implantation–>hCG secreted–>maintains CL  continued progesterone secretion

Progesterone negative feedback for FSH and LH

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13
Q

cycle duration

A

Cycle typically 28 days
Follicular phase can vary
Luteal phase ALWAYS 14 days

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14
Q

changes due to hormones

A
Endometrium
Endocervix
Breasts
Vagina
Hypothalamic thermoregulating center
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15
Q

Menstruation: endometrium

A

-sloughed to basal level
Compact stroma cells
Short, narrow endometrial glands

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16
Q

Estrogen: cell growth

A

Follicular phase
Stroma thickens
Glands elongate (straight and tubular)
“proliferative” endometrium

17
Q

Progesterone: differentiation

A
Luteal phase
Stroma becomes loose and edematous
Blood vessels twist and thicken
Glands become tortuous
“secretory” endometrium
18
Q

Endocervix changes

A

Cervical mucus

Estradiol: *sperm capture, storage, transport
Thin
Clear
Watery

Progesterone:
Thick
Opaque
Tenacious (prevents sperm from being transferred)

19
Q

Breast changes

A
in luteal phase after ovulation:
Progesterone 
Stimulates acinar glands
Rounded configuration
Breast tenderness
20
Q

Thermogenesis changes

A

Progesterone:

Increases body temp by .6 – 1 degree fahrenheit

21
Q

Hypothalamus: hormonal control via meds

A

Leuoprolide
Ganirelix
Clomiphene citrate
(all deal with GnRH)

22
Q

Leuoprolide

A

GnRH agonist
When continuous – decreases pulsatile release
Decreases FSH/LH (initial surge)

23
Q

Ganirelix

A

GnRH antagonst

Decreases FSH/LH

24
Q

Clomiphene citrate

A

Antagonist of estrogen at hypothalamus
Increases LH/FSH release
Causes ovulation (can cause multiple births)

25
Q

Hormonal control: Ovary

A

Combination oral contraceptives

Progestins

26
Q

Combination oral contraceptives

A

Estrogen and Progestin
-Progestin: suppression of LH secretion–>no ovulation
Thicken cervical mucus
Altered fallopian tube peristalsis
-Estrogen: suppression of FHS secretion–>no dominant follicle

27
Q

Progestins

A

Thicken cervical mucus
Alters endometrial proliferation (“hostile” environment)
Some suppress ovulation (if high enough dose)
-Depo-Provera, Nexplanon

28
Q

OMM

A
Viscerosomatics:
Ovaries: T10-T11 (lateralized)
Uterus: T9-L2
Fallopian tubes: T10-L2 (lateralized)
Parasympathetics:
Pelvic splanchnic nerves S2-S4
Lateral fallopian tubes: vagus nerve
Somatic dysfunction: related to pelvic pain
29
Q

Middlemertz?

A

pain that happens mid-cycle