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Are there typically two eggs produced in each cycle, one from each ovary, or just one? AxelBoldt 21:15 Jan 2, 2003 (UTC)
It's one egg per menstrual cycle (normally - I'm excluding the use of fertility drugs, abnormal FSH levels, etc.). Left or right ovary is as far as anyone knows, random. -- Someone else 02:55 Jan 8, 2003 (UTC)
Except for false twins when 2 eggs mature at the same time :-)
This said, though the explanation above is very clear to me (I learned that), it is very scientific. Whatabout real life ? I have two ovaries, I feel my body, I talk with my female peers about female stuff; So, I can tell you, I (and many) feel some pain for a couple of hours each time. And each time it's on the opposite side. And each time I wanted to be pregnant, I just waited for the little pain... and there it was ! There's a lot more about menstrual cycle than biological stuff, there are pains, moods, pimples...get real !
Also, it could be mentionned that isolated women such as nons menstrual cycles tend to synchronize.
And this article focuses on human cycle. It would be very interesting to indicate the heat time in animals (or whatever the word is : the fact females of some species accept the males only at the right moment). It is the case for cows, whose cycle is just 28 days as ours...
And, women who are sick or frail because of lack of food, or simply too young (starting age 9-16 ?) or too old (40-55) stop ovulating. Only healthy and able bodies can ovulate.
FWIW: The word for the sensation of pain at ovulation is "Mittleschmertz".
The 'scientific' word for the period of sexual receptivity (heat) is "estrus", and animals in which this is a prominent feature are usually said to have "estrous" (adjectival form) cycles rather than menstrual cycles. And sometimes a coin flip produces the sequence HTHTHT <G> -- Someone else 21:48 Jan 8, 2003 (UTC)
Do cows menstruate, I mean with blood and everything? AxelBoldt 21:45 Jan 8, 2003 (UTC)
Same thing happened to me, definitely dogs have periods. This article is mistaken in that respect.
I've read that cats dont have a menopause -- but I don't know about the blood. -- Tarquin 21:53 Jan 8, 2003 (UTC)
I saw a cat having her period once. I'm really hoping she wasn't simply bleeding from there... Also, it was a pregnant cat, so perhaps that would actually dis-support the idea that she's menstruating.
if most other mammals don't bleed, this raises the question -- why do we? What purpose does it serve? Why have we developed this? I think I'll rearrange a bit tomorrow & put some headings in. But this article is shaping up really nicely! :-) -- Tarquin
The women, the rules and the moon
the researchers for a long time raised the question of sexuality specific to our species, and more precisely the characteristics of female sexuality. The most marked characteristics were the absence of oestrus, the permanent receptivity of the human woman. If there are primates which resemble to us in this respect - especially at species monogamists - that usual, and if is not never marked. An explanation, advanced by Desmond Morris, would be that the woman seeks to keep a man by a more intense and more continuous sexual activity. It was also noticed that the absence of oestrus makes be sure to impregnate his partner, the man must maintain sexual intercourse with it for one period longer than in our cousins. Knight finds these explanations not very convincing. What is marked in the female of our species, he says, is not his constant receptivity, but rather the moment when it is not very receptive - the menstruation. He writes: Despite oestrus loss, hormonally controlled sexual signals are not entirely missing from the human female menstrual cycle. One the contrary, menstruation in human has been accentuated with an external display. It is menstruation rather than ovulation that the human female experiments her behaviour have hormonally influenced to has some degree. Woman lose considerably more blood during menstruation than does any other primate. This shedding of blood, although small, represents a significant loss - has loss which has to Be made good by additional food intake, particularly of iron. The advantage of this has not yet been explained.
(Knight, 1991) menstruation function like a signal. It will say to the men that the woman refuses the sexual intimacy. He notes initially that, if the cycle of fruitfulness is not necessarily related to the phases of the moon - the periodicity of the primates is variable - at the human woman, the typical cycle is about 28,5 days - i.e., that it can coincide very exactly with the lunar cycle. Then, Knight quotes work on the synchronization of periods: certain researchers discovered that when women spend enough time together - in a pension, for example, or a university dortoire, they tend to have their periods at the same time.
Does being on your period and having sex with no condom higher or lower the chances of getting pregnant?
The previous paragraph (and the main article) both imply that it is possible to become pregnant while one is menstruating (say, in the first week, to be specific). But this is hard to understand, given the mechanism for the delivery and attachment of a fertilized egg. I have not been able to find references elsewhere on the Web to this idea. Can someone provide some reliable or credible justification? David 19:25, 29 May 2004 (UTC)
Okay, that makes sense. But still, regardless of hormone levels, how can the fertilized egg implant itself when the uteral lining is being shed? And if, by some miracle, it did, how would the egg grow without the nutrition that the lining provides? David 15:18, 31 May 2004 (UTC)
"Worldwide, various cultures have experienced varying attitudes toward menstruation. The ?bleeding time? or ?moon time? has been viewed as "sacred" to an impure time, as well as everything in between. Contemporary society views this significant act of ?letting go? as an "unclean" end of the continuum, instead of viewing it as a part of a cyclic process of life and death, birth and rebirth.
Unfortunately, women have come to know and experience menstruation as the "the curse", something dirty and to be ashamed of; an attitude which society encourages and endorses?and which is constantly reinforced whenever broadcast media airs commercials for tampons and medications for PMS etc. Women are constantly being reminded in front of their partners, children, peers and co-workers that they are the weaker sex because of menstruation.
Menstruation, in fact is a time of great intuitive power. This phase is not a time to make changes; however, it is time to reflect on changes that need to be made in the next cycle. Persons who doubt the validity of such statements are encouraged to seek more information about women?s cycles as they are defined and written about by women who adhere to their cyclic nature. There is a wealth of information about this on the Internet. Women need to be aware that the less education that they have about their reproductive and hormonal systems, the more they are likely to be manipulated by an overzealous pharmaceutical industry that stands to profit greatly from their lack of knowledge."
1. This is not NPOV. 2. If reworded, this should rather go into the menstruation article. 3. The last paragraph is strawmanning propaganda for "natural medicines" or something like that. David.Monniaux 00:33, 4 Apr 2004 (UTC)
" Menstruating women need to be aware that during the post-ovulatory phase of their cycle, their body systems are slowing down; as hormone levels are dropping, the immune system is also inhibited. Medications and other substances may have more of an adverse affect on women?s mental/emotional state than at other phases of the cycle. Since the body is slowing down, it is also important that women slow down mentally, emotionally and physically so as not to put undue stress on themselves. Menstruation is a time of ?letting go? ? not only of the uterine lining, but of mental and emotional issues; it is a time of release ? necessary so that a woman may start a new cycle after her menses has ended on all levels. Menstruation is part of a cyclic progression in women?s lives that honors life and all creation. Women are the human replicate of the Goddess on earth. Menstruating women are the font for the survival of humankind.
During the paramenstrum; pre-menstrual and bleeding phase, women will experience heightened sensitivity, are more aware, intuitive, psychic and powerful. If a woman does not abide with her body?s natural inclinations during this phase, she may experience adverse reactions; such as abdominal pain, migraine headache, depression and irritability."
Some more non NPOV + propaganda stuff. David.Monniaux 00:34, 4 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Anyhow, I recommand a new article named Menstruation to include all the cultural aspects as in <nowiki de:Menstruation</nowiki>
See "What links here": there are many items regarding the simple fact of "menstruation", pretty far away of a "cycle" -- Robodoc.at 10:58, 1 May 2004 (UTC)
Adha does literaly means 'a hurt'! Why did you change the text? Do you understand Arabic? A. 04:42, 12 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Hi. I just read the main article as well as some associated articles. It was unclear to me what happens to the egg that is travelling down the Fallopian tube but is not fertilized. Does it finishes its journey and ends up being eliminated along with the endometrium or does it stay in the tube and is somehow destroyed? As a matter of fact, I vaguely remember reading somewhere that the second hypothesis is what happens, and that the "reabsorption" of the egg by the female organism would be responsible for PMS. Is there any truth in this? You can probably tell that I know squad about the topic, but maybe this article or some of the associated ones could use some clarifying on what exactly happens to the unfertilized egg in its fruitless trip accross the Fallopian tube. Regards, Redux 19:32, 4 Oct 2004 (UTC)
I noticed that this is a featured article but hope it is ok to make some extensive changes. I tried to preserve all the information that had already been accumulated. In the section on 'Islam and menstruation' I removed a section that had been verbatim taken from another website, but the link to the website has been incorporated for reference. Ekem 17:38, 9 Apr 2005 (UTC)
I removed the following recently added sentences here because they may not be correct and were expressed clumsily. I think the ideas may be good, and probably worth including but we need to make it more specific and verified.
already "banked" in the ovary. As all these proto-eggs are present in the body from ((early in fetal development-- not birth)), and wait decades until they are used to create a new human life, this has implications for chromosomal damage. (this is a bit vague) Compare this to sperm, which are created fresh daily. A woman's exposure to radioactivity (including X-rays) and environmental toxin has a cumulative effect on her fertility, arguably more so than on that of men. (I have not seen direct evidence for this statement; is it just speculation or can you cite support?)
It might be more precise and accurate to say, As a woman's total egg supply is formed in fetal life, to be ovulated decades later, it has been suggested that this long life-time may make the chromatin of eggs more vulnerable to division problems, breakage, and mutation than the chromatin of sperm, which are produced continuously during a man's reproductive life. This possibility is supported by the observation that conceptuses and infants of older mothers have higher rates of chromosome abnormalities than those of older fathers.
I'm not so concerned about whose wording we use as that the facts are correct, and not just vaguely "arguable". I cannot think of any examples of environmental toxins causing damage to egg chromatin, and think it unlikely that radiation exposure plays any role in the age-related chromosome abnormalities. I am confident that the latter version is supportable but not so sure about the former. Further facts welcome. alteripse 01:31, 2 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Your version sounds eminently sensible to me! I have no further facts to offer. From your technical language, i am sure you have far more detailed knowledge to draw on than I do. Please feel free to insert your changed sentences. Many thanks for your work. BrainyBabe 01:50, 2 Jun 2005 (UTC)
I would like to see a paragraph on the least fertile time in the menstrual cycle. The discussion always focusses on the most fertile time, never the least. Personally, this is important for me because I have sex with my girl friend only in the one or two days following full onset of menstruation, in the belief that that is the least fertile time. Surely some contributor to Wikipedia has access to some truly authoritative information on this important question. David 18:23, 3 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Hmmm, right. Normally, the fertility is around 14 days before the next periods. Or 14 days after the first day of past periods. The key is to see when the middle just is and to avoid this time area. You may note it by several manners
If you take temperature, it will be low for a certain number of days. Then, it will suddently go up by half a degree. Then stay up till the end of the cycle. The ovulation is on the day just before the temperature going up (the last day with low temperature). Of course, you can not guess that day. So, normally, you have 14 days of low temperature (beginning on first day of periods), followed by 14 days of higher temperature (ending on the day just before the periods or first day).
On the previous days before the temperature goes up, the white substance that gets out of vagina will get sticky. If there is no substance at all, sperm survive 24 hours. Not much. If there is a lot of substance, they survive up to 4 days. The ovule survives usually only 24 hours.
So if you make love at the beginning of the cycle, you should feel secure for *less* than a week after the periods stopped. I would say only 5-6 days. No more. As soon as there is white substance, protect yourself. Even if ovulation is 3-4 days later, the sperm might survive long enough, so be careful. So, only 5-6 days of secure time on a regular 28 days cycle. Day 5 till day 10.
Then, your girlfriend may note when the ovulation occur. It is the day just before the temperature going up. Usually, lots of white substance. Sometimes (in particular for those already mom), there is a tiny bit of blood loss. Sometimes, we also feel a bit of pain on one side for an hour or so. The uterus is also different, but most women do not want to check this. The best way to be sure when the ovulation occured is by temperature, but all the other information is good to confirm. After the ovulation, wait at least 3 days. At least. I'd say it would be okay to drop plastic stuff while she has been at least 4 days on higher temperature. If she is on a regular cycle, that should give you from day 19 possibly till day 27. There is normally always 14 days between ovulation and next periods. So, you have 7-8 good.
If she has an irregular cycle, always remember that the second part is the one fixed (always 14 days). The first part of the cycle is the one varying. If she is on a 3 weeks cycle, avoid making love just after the periods for at least 2 weeks without protection, or just make it only once just after the bleeding has stopped. If she is on a 5 weeks periods, yeah, champaign !!! you have 10-14 days fun.
Is that clear ?
Anthere 19:13, 3 Jun 2005 (UTC)
by the way, may I inquire why the article is protected ? Ant
I would like to clear up the issue of the body basal temperature being low from onset of the period until a rise during ovulation. There is no typical ovulation schedule and each woman has a different cycle unique to her own physiology. I for instance run a temp of 99.0 F during my period. After it goes back to normal and then I only experience a slight uptake in my temperature. A menstrual cycle is unique to each woman. There is no "safe" time to have intercourse and pregnancy is entirely possible during mensturation. As I said a few times already it depends on the woman's unique physiology and cycle time- if she has a short cycle - and you have intercourse during her period- if conditions are right sperm can live in the cervical mucous for up to a week and she can then become pregnant.
Not too long ago, it was proven that eggs do form after birth. (surprise!) I've lost the reference though, and I'm sure somebody will revert if I don't provide it. AlbertCahalan 18:39, 4 Jun 2005 (UTC)
You may be correct that someone has reported evidence of postnatal new egg development, but unless you can provide a reference that seems convincing, we should still go by the current consensus on the topic as reflected by the major textbooks on the topic. E.g. Johnson & Everitt, Essential Reproduction, Blackwell Science, 2000, page 14: ...in the female all the oogonial germ cells cease dividing mitotically either before birth (human, cow, sheep, goat, mouse) or shortly thereafter (rat, pig, cat, rabbit, hamster) to enter into their first meiotic division, thereby becoming primary oocytes.... The consequence of this early termination of mitosis is that, by the time of birth, a woman has all the oocytes within her ovaries that she will ever have. We can update articles to reflect brand new research as soon as it can be verified. Don't act persecuted, just find a source. alteripse 19:47, 4 Jun 2005 (UTC)
http://www.genomenewsnetwork.org/articles/2004/03/10/eggs.php http://www.newsday.com/news/health/ny-hseggs0311,0,7536500.story?coll=ny-health-headlines http://www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm?hint=2&DR_ID=22627
Three articles on the reproductive experiment on mice that is convincing evidence that mammals contiue to produce new eggs. I suggest that this article at least be updated to present this new evidence as an alternative to aging textbook material. The static egg count theory need not be discarded until studies of human egg production have been verified, but I see no benefit of not including this information as well. leeach 3:25, 30 Aug 2005 (UTC)
I just added a link to folliculogenesis in the follicular stage section (I think I forgot to log in when I did it). I wanted to point out that the image used to depict the ovarian histology in the article is erroneous. A lot of undergraduate biology books use some version of the diagram, but as I understand it follicle growth is a stacked process that runs the action-packed portion of its course in about ninety days, or three menstrual cycles. If anybody can find a more representative one... - D. Wu 02:45, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
I'd like to use this as one of the daily featured articles on the main page, but the introduction needs to be beefed up a bit first. Would someone care to do the honors? →Raul654 18:59, August 12, 2005 (UTC)
Shouldn't it make sense that that "menstruation" stage occurs last, following the "luteal phase"? The picture supports this point, as does the first time the menstrual cycle occurs--the corpus luteum cannot degrade if it is not formed first in the previous phase. unless the present order is the scientifically accepted order, i propose it be changed to follicular phase->ovulation->luteal phase->menstruation. -- Bubbachuck 18:31, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
Hi, when an article is nominated for featured status, there is a page where users leave comments on whether they support or object to the nomination. Where is that particular page for this article? I have been unable to find it.
the usual mix up - i doubt any woman would want to use a menstrual cup out of silicon !!
ahpook 11:41, 30 August 2005 (UTC)
New eggs continue to develop in adult mice this may only effect animals that undergo an estrus cycle but it would be interesting to mention it here. Opinions? -- Rakista 16:21, 30 August 2005 (UTC)
If mice don't menstrate then I would not confuse things by putting it here. alteripse 16:40, 30 August 2005 (UTC)
I'm not sure whether 'mene' in Greek means moon. I thought that moon in Greek was 'seléne' or 'selaîna' and that 'mén' meant month. I'll try to look into this today or within this week. Perhaps it is some ancient or rare word which I don't know. Tell me if I am wrong.
How did this make featured article? I don't mean to be negative (and of course I intend to add to it to improve what I deem as insufficiencies) but it seems to be rather light on information (for a featured article). There's a whole wealth of knowledge on superstitions on menstruation. I thought the article was just giving a short summary because there's a full article on that topic, but nothing's linked! (Compare this to the anarcho-capitalism article, about which far fewer people would be capable of contributing.) All it has is a sentence about social perception of menstruation. Is there a record of the nomination? I clicked the above link and it didn't take me to a nomination page. MrVoluntarist 00:18, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
according to the page, "A regular menstrual cycle as described here only occurs in the great apes. Menstrual cycles vary in length from an average of 29 days in orangutans to an average of 37 days in chimpanzees."
though i do not know about bonobos, i am absolutely certain that common chimpanzees have estrus, not menstrual cycles. i will attempt to verify whether or not this is the case with bonobos as well. what source makes the claim that chimpanzees menstruate? thanks.-- Gozar 15:30, 8 September 2005 (UTC)
interesting. well, i was wrong, thank you for the info. -- Gozar 13:02, 9 September 2005 (UTC)
Does anybody know why, when a group of women live within close proximity of each other, their cycles start to begin and end at the same time? I know that this happens. I live in a dorm with three other girls. I have a 21 day cycle. Now, they do too. 129.252.234.61 06:24, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
Please look at this website or just google (women synchronize menstruation)
http://www.wonderquest.com/pheromone.htm
This is an important issue that we must address for a complete discussion of this topic.
The basic point is the following:
pheromones gradually effect the menstrual cycle of a woman eventually synchronizing the periods of all the women living together.
Furthermore, this website
http://www.experimentarium.dk/uk/naturvidenskab_og_teknik/artikler/artikel.140.html
Asserts that women's menstrual cycles are also influenced by pheromones that a man secrets and that women's sense of smell is more receptive to these types of pheromones that are given off in sweat.
A caveat to all this:
Some believe that the research supporting this is not credible see the following article:
http://www.straightdope.com/columns/021220.html
They cite methodological errors, statistical coincidence and eventual divergence due to differing cycle lengths.
ARM 04:17, 9 November 2005 (UTC)
Connecting menstrual cycle with moon apears under the title of mysticism.Webster's Third provides three definitions for Mysticism the third being "vague speculation, belief without foundation.".The word is used here in this sesnse.I guess we can find a better title to describe it , specially because the words Mysticism and mystic are defined in wikipedia in a very different way.The terms moon time and lunar period etc arose from various folk cultures (specialy those with a goddess religeon) and found their way to popular culture partly as euphemisms.So I suggest replacing the title with Ancient Goddess religeons or something like that. Pasha 01:05, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
Is there a reference for this:
" Many women, after a period of not being exposed to artificial nighttime lighting, find their menstrual cycles begin to occur in rhythm with the lunar cycle. " Bubba73 (talk), 21:38, 1 December 2005 (UTC)
I'm not sure how accurate the quotes from Leviticus are in representing the "Christian" view of menstruation. I thought the laws in Leviticus (the Kosher laws, instructions to not wear clothing of mixed fabrics, etc.) were not followed at all by most Christians?
Justification for removal of text
In response to the above question I removed the following text.
Menstruation is discussed in the third book of the Hebrew Bible, Leviticus, which details the Christian Holiness Code. Leviticus 15:19 states "And if a woman have an issue, and her issue in her flesh be blo od, she shall be put apart seven days: and whosoever toucheth her shall be unclean until the even." http://www.carm.org/kjv/Lev/Lev_15.htm
Further penalties are imposed on those who would engage in sexual intercourse with a woman during her menstrual cycle.
Leviticus 18:19 instructs "You shall not approach a woman to uncover her nakedness while she is in her menstrual uncleanness", while Leviticus 20:18 specifies this code further: "And if a man shall lie with a woman having her sickness, and shall uncover her nakedness; he hath discovered her fountain, and she hath uncovered the fountain of her blood: and both of them shall be cut off from among their people". http://www.carm.org/kjv/Lev/Lev_20.htm
Christian doctrine is that Christ freed us from adherence to the Levitical laws as a way to maintain a right relationship with God. If a user knows of a Christian sect that teaches observation of these Levitical laws, we can reinsert it with the mention that it is held only among the whateverites.
Note to anonymous inserter. Please give us a source. I think you are a lone crank, not representing any significant Christian community. Do not re-insert until you can tell us which Christian sects support this, not which you think should support it. alteripse 20:34, 29 December 2005 (UTC)
Let me rephrase this: Does anyone else think we should not spin off all the religious discussion into a separate article on Religious views of menstruation? alteripse 06:47, 24 December 2005 (UTC)
Justification for re-addition In response to: "I'm not sure how accurate the quotes from Leviticus are in representing the "Christian" view of menstruation. I thought the laws in Leviticus (the Kosher laws, instructions to not wear clothing of mixed fabrics, etc.) were not followed at all by most Christians?"
As defined by wikipedia, the [bible] "is the revealed word of God or an authoritative record of the relationship between God, the world and humankind", thus by definition, any laws it decrees upon menstruation are the Christian view of menstruation. Whether or not a Christian actually follows the law as written does not change the fact that the law is a part of the sacred scripture. Furthermore, the information provided was worded so as to be consistent with the information provided under Islamic and Judaic tradition. re: "Christian doctrine is that Christ freed us from adherence to the Levitical laws as a way to maintain a right relationship with God". Please cite the Bible passage or passages indicating which Old Testament laws were made obsolete by Christ. I will be adding the text back in based on the argument that the passages are quoted verbatim from the Bible which is considered the authoritive Christian view. The adherence to those passages is a seperate issue.
See above. Name a Christian sect that teaches and observes this aspect of the Levitical laws. Your claims above deliberately misrepresent the sources. An encyclopedia is not where you persuade other people that only you have the correct understanding of Christianity. Just cite who else supports and teaches this if I am mistaken? alteripse 20:41, 29 December 2005 (UTC)
Where did I say that I have the correct understanding of Christianity? The logic is simple: The Bible is the sacred text of Christians. The Bible has specific text referring to menstruation. And so I've quoted those statements as a resource of the the Bible's view of menstruation. To clarify that not all Christians follow this part of the Bible, a notation was made at the end, but the underlying fact remains that the Bible has text referring to menstruation. I am saying "this is what is written in the bible, but yet you're interpreting it as me saying "this is what Christians believe".
To our exasperating anonymous inserter: You have done nothing except claim that "logically" Christians should follow levitical laws. In reality, 99.99999% don't teach it, don't follow it, have never even heard of it, and would laugh out loud at your claim that they should "logically" do so. Even your claim about the Seventh Day Adventists is demonstrably false: there is no, repeat NO, evidence that they follow or teach levitical laws about menstruation. I assumed you had some weird independent 25 person congregation in mind, but you can't even truthfully point to a single Christian church that actually teaches and follows the levitical menstruation rules, can you!? Why are you so selfishly insistent in breaking our rules and thwarting our purposes here? Why not start your own church or at least your own website based on your own interpretation of the need for the levitical menstrual laws? alteripse 03:19, 30 December 2005 (UTC)
As a Christian, I believe that Christ's forgiving love and sacrificial death freed us from the literal practice of Old Testament law. Jesus overcame the prejudice of female blood when he healed the bleeding woman, Mark 5:25-34. Jesus was not embarrassed and treated her with respect. Jesus actions give me freedom from Leviticus. CoralieK 11:22, 1 May 2007 (UTC)
Linked directly to quote. Removed text relating to Doctor's interpretation, as it did not add any relevancy.
Really? Do we want to include slang terms for all devices? I have removed it, but please feel free to reinstate if I have missed something. It happens. 22:58, 29 December 2005 (UTC) (Skittle)
While this type of software seems relevant to the article, they seem to be taking over the external links section. We now have links to menstrual cycle calendars at babymed.com, procod.com, bloodays.com, ovulation-calculator.com, perimon.com, and kyberdigi.cz
Another menstrual calendar - ovusoft.com - used to be there, but was deleted in the last edit with no explanation.
And I'm sure there are many more out there. It doesn't seem practical to include them all, so I'm leaning towards removing all of them from the links section. I'm interested to see if others have any alternate suggestions, though. Lyrl 14:33, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
Pick the best. Delete the rest. alteripse 16:42, 18 February 2006 (UTC)
I'm interested in why this entire cycle might have evolved as such in the first place, instead of other (theoretical) possibilities--shouldn't there be a section in the article about theories concerning the possible evolutionary pathways toward the menstrual cycle? (Either that, or I didn't look hard enough.) ~ GMH talk to me 08:25, 26 February 2006 (UTC)
My understanding was a little different than that provided in the edit comments. The MOST fertile time is from three days before ovulation, to the day of ovulation (so only four days - though if one is avoiding pregnancy, the risky window is more like 8-10 days). But if a woman doesn't know when she ovulates, or how long her luteal phase is, things become much more fuzzy. 10-16 day luteal phase is considered normal. If a woman has a 10 day luteal phase, she is still in her 'most fertile' time 10 days before her period (the day of ovulation). If a woman has a 16 day luteal phase, she begins her 'most fertile' time 19 days before her period (16 day luteal phase + 3 day average sperm life = 19). Lyrl 02:35, 28 February 2006 (UTC)
In the section titled "Etymology and the lunar month" the following statement appears:
"Many women, when not being exposed to artificial nighttime lighting, find that their menstrual cycles occur in rhythm with the lunar cycle."
That the amount or quality of light reflected from the surface of the moon can influence menstruation is an extraordinary claim. I don't believe it should be allowed to stand unsupported. Is there any legitimate research available in support of this claim? If not, I believe the statement should be struck.
Thanks.
Are there any wikipedian academics out there looking into this? I ask because I've noticed the considerably small amount of theories on the subject and feel that I came upon an insight that may be useful for anyone interested in reasearching it and presenting it to the scientific community.
This is an insight I have gained upon observing animal behavior, specifically, my two cats. I've had a siamese cat for years now and she has become very attached to me. I read in the wikipedia page that siamese usually attach themselves to one member of the household which is me. Recently I welcomed a cat that was found on the street. I found their interaction very interesting, as it seemed my siamese became immediatly jealous of the other cat whenever she would move near me. Soon enough, the cat I had recently adopted began go through heat. During this time, my siamese, whenever the other cat would appear, my siamese would automatically pretend to go in heat. In fact, her movements became even more exaggerated than when she was actually in heat. I know that this wasnt genuine because this would only happen whenever the other cat's presence would be known.
However, as time went by, the siamese's jealousy had made her heat authentic. After a while to this day, both cats have synchronized heat seasons.
I think this could be a valuable observation for human females in their synchronization. My point is, I believe that the aspect of competition among females is the main factor in altering their psychology, which in turn affects their menstrual cycles. It's been said that synchronized cycles are most common among single women that live together as well as womes who "party" together. I believe that the synchronization of their menstrual cycles occurs to provoke a "leveling" of the playing field. An unconscious evolutionary tool optimizing the mating process.
I would have liked to follow up on this but biology is nowhere near my field. What do you guys think?~ Waking
A search of PubMed seems indicate following sequence of recent debate:
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link)The only comment I would add is with ragard to User:Waking's comments above: I was given to understand that this also was seen with nuns in convents, who presumeably are not competing for " a "leveling" of the playing field. An unconscious evolutionary tool optimizing the mating process". David Ruben Talk 00:51, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
Even though it is untasteful, but can there be pictures of menstrul blood, or a bloody vagina, or maybe a comparison with real blood in beakers? or bloody feminine hygine products? We males dont have vaginas to experiance and know what menstration is and looks like. It can be glowing and pulsating red light as far as this article explains. Doesnt wikipedia have a be bold policy? Normal reproductive textbooks (HS level and below) dont ever show photos of the blood. I think wikipedia should be bold and put some up. Patcat88 16:56, 30 April 2006 (UTC)
For those interested in imagery of menstruation, the web site [4] has photos that explore the meaning and symbology of menstruation. Humans live through meaning, see Victor Frankl, ISBN 0-671-24422-1 Pbk. The aim is to give women, and men, positive and fun images for this natural function. CoralieK 11:08, 1 May 2007 (UTC)
I have found an error I would like someone to check out if possible. The information doesn't seem the correlate, and if it does, please inform. Please read the following:
'The fertile window' is the topic of the section.
'Sperm survive inside a woman for --->669,999<--- days on average, with survival time up to five days considered normal.' Is the figure 669,999 correct? Thank you. 72.244.150.131 15:28, 7 May 2006 (UTC)
This is a pet peeve of mine, but I made a minor change of wording in the "sea sponges" section of the "Menstrual Products" subheading. I would just like you all to know from a certified science nerd that sponges are not "plant-like" in any way, nor should they be labeled as such. I changed the wording from "from plant-like animals" to "from the harvested skeletons of animals" because frankly, if people don't know how unsentient sponges are, then we have bigger socioeconomic problems than menstrual products.
Yes, I know the wording sounds harsher, but it's science and it's fact. And most women who would even consider the sponge would get past the fact that it's an animal and look to the environmental and economic benefits. -- —Preceding unsigned comment added by Lady Voldything ( talk • contribs)
Do the areola, lips, etc. change sizes periodically according to the menstrual cycle?
I am a new user - I usually only make minor edits, but I came across this page and was very distressed to see that someone has erased the whole page and had left the words
"Spongeman was here"
and nothing else except for the first image of the menstrual cycle.
I really am unfamiliar with major edits, so to make a small remedy for the time being, I copied and pasted the last version before the vandalism - it's not in the proper setup, but I think all of the information is there.
BTW, good catch on the duplication Lyrl. A lot didn't seem right about that addition, but I'm not familiar enough with this article to have caught that. Skittle 13:26, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
I see this has been suggested before ( #Menstruation as a new Article). Noticing that all the other phases (follicular, ovulation, luteal) now have their own article, I think it's a good time to spin off "menstruation" into its own article. I'm thinking about taking some information from the "Overview", "menstruation", "physical expeItalic textrience", "menstrual products", and "culture and menstruation" for the spin-off article. Any comments? Lyrl Talk Contribs 17:06, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
This page is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
"The corpus luteum is the solid body formed in the ovaries after the egg has been released from the fallopian tube which continues to grow and divide for a while." Sorry to be a grammarian, but exactly what is it that continues to grow and divide for a while? The corpus luteum or the egg? (I presume it isn't the fallopian tube.) -- Gyrofrog (talk) 02:26, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
I think the figure in this article is incorrect on a few points:
Desiderius 8:44, 10 May 2007 (UTC)
Not only that, but the image gives off the wrong impression that the follicle goes from a primordial follicle to a tertiary follicle in the first days of the menstrual cycle. That is wrong since it takes almost a year for the follicle to attain the antral stage (and then be recruited and selected as the dominant follicle that will undergo ovulation). The timescale from the recruitment of the primordial follicle all the way to ovulation actually takes about 375 days! (c.f. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folliculogenesis). This is a commone mistake and even some textbooks have it. The first three follicles must be changed to smaller versions of the fourth one with a smaller antrum. There is a diagram in the folliculogenesis page. Notice how the follicle is already "grown-up" when it reaches the selection window to enter the ovarian cycle? I already messaged the creator of the picture but he never answered...
Does anyone have a better diagram or could anyone make one? I think it's pretty important. Horia 03:14, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
Sorry, but what are the rules for creating an image for an article? I suspect that images, like article text, must follow the No original research rule. As such I would suggest that all of the data that are plotted need to come from reliable, verifiable, secondary sources as defined by official policy. So, number one I think the image needs references (what data support these claims?), and number two, with no offense meant, I don't think that it's okay for a user to change the image based on their own experience of actual temperature charts--that would qualify as original research. Please, anyone, let me know if I'm not correct, or what the policies are. All good-faith feedback is welcome. Ehb ( talk) 16:42, 3 July 2008 (UTC)
While it's certainly not unheard of for a girl to first menstruate at the age of 8, this is considered precocious (Cesario & Hughes 2007, J Obstet Gynecol Neonatal Nurs 36:263-274). In recent study of over 700 girls designed to study girls with early menarche, the youngest girl to menstruate was 9.4 years at menarche (Sloboda et al. 2007, J Clin Endocrinol Metab 92:46-50).
The references I've provided above suggest that this statement is inaccurate as it stands. Unfortunately, I do not have good data on what should be considered normal. In things of this nature I have noticed that there is often a tendancy to report that a certain range is normal, possibly so as not to make people worry that they are abnormal. However, to say that any age range is "normal" is incomplete unless normality is defined. In a sample of one-million, it might be "normal" to have one girl who reaches menarche at age 5, and another not until 25. But that doesn't mean that "5-25" is the "normal" range.
My suggestion is to report the mean age of menarche with the standard deviation, based on one or (hopefully) more solid sources, and then perhaps to add a statement mentioning that the distribution is highly variable.
Ehb 17:47, 4 June 2007 (UTC)
This article has been removed from Category:Fertility awareness as part of a planned deletion of Category:Periodic abstinence, Category:Fertility awareness, and Category:Natural family planning - articles from those categories will be merged into the new Category:Fertility tracking. Category:Fertility tracking is currently a subcategory of Category:Menstruation. Please bring up any concerns related to this merger at Category talk:Fertility tracking. If there are no objections within four days, the three categories proposed for deletion will be tagged for speedy deletion. Lyrl Talk C 22:47, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
The introduction says "occurs in the females of human beings and other great apes". The section "Menstrual cycles in other mammals" states that estrus cycles should not be confused with menstrual cycles, then appears to give the duration of estrus for chimpanzees and orangutans. This is either ambiguous (do apes have menstrual or estrus cycles?) or flat out wrong. 75.198.89.65 04:14, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
The article states: It is unusual for a woman to experience cycle length variations of less than four days.
I would say, it is rather very usual.—Preceding unsigned comment added by Kasiata ( talk • contribs) 08:46, 3 September 2007
The article reads that the Fallopian tubes need to capture the ovum...however it is the fimbrae that catch the ovum, which then travels through the Fallopian tubes. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Chem Lady ( talk • contribs) 04:15, 22 October 2007 (UTC)
I googled a bit to find explanations why in the course of evolution (some) primates developed the menstrual cycle and other species not, but I could not find any. Given the fact that a non-negligible share of women suffer of dysmenorrhea to a degree that they are severely constricted in activities of every-day life as well as their work, the "invention" of the menstrual cycle simply seems to be a maladaption. Maybe someone can write a bit on the current scientific status of this issue. 84.163.85.165 ( talk) 19:45, 24 November 2007 (UTC)
Evolution is a controversial theory and only 55% of people believe it according to a 1993 poll, i think its best to not mention it at all to be honest considering wiki's neutrality and the amount it could spin-off topic.
75.179.163.66 ( talk) 05:14, 2 May 2009 (UTC) Jade Rat
This sentence "Sperm survive inside a woman for 3 days on average, with survival time up to five days considered normal" seems a bit off. It states the average as 3 days, while survival up to 5 days considered normal. would normal not usually mean average? should it not state that 5 days is the maximum it can survive?
The image at the top of the article was replaced with a revised version yesterday. I had both some concerns and some positives comments on the changes:
The improvements to the figure are greatly appreciated, but it concerns me they were apparently done to the old image file with the several inaccuracies addressed above rather than to the corrected version. Lyrl Talk C 19:45, 24 March 2008 (UTC)
I have a question, when you first get your period, does it come every month, because ive had my period twice already, and i first got it in january. I'm not getting it every month. If you have the answer to my question, please respond. 76.28.39.43 ( talk) 03:40, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
I know that sound unusual but I was looking for mensuration cycle/mensuration/MC etc for their cultural beliefs and significance. Can we have a MC in popular culture like heading :):) 59.95.104.87 ( talk) 18:21, 27 July 2008 (UTC)Maddy, 11.51pm,27 July 2008.
Is it possible to have your period when you're pregnant? Like you could miss your first one, but have your second one? I thought I could find the answer here but I couldn't find anything. -- 86.156.114.22 ( talk) 20:05, 11 September 2008 (UTC)
What is with these two sections? Is it just me or are they mixed up? Changed arround.
Doc James ( talk) 02:13, 20 September 2008 (UTC)
Could the notes section not be combined into the rest of it? And needs to be better referenced. A section on history and society would be great. There are dozens of books on this topic. It mainly just covers the medical aspect and doesn't give a full overview of the menstrual cycle.
The discussion of estrogen surges, FSH, LH, etc. in the "hormonal control" section seems, to me, to be redundant with the "follicular phase" and "luteal phase" sections. I think the "control" section was there first, and as the article developed the material was added to the "phase" section, which I think is a more natural place for it.
I would like to remove most of the "control" section, leaving just "effects on other systems" (or some other title) as its own section (which will need some expansion). Any thoughts on this plan? Lyrl Talk C 17:32, 21 September 2008 (UTC)
Still requesting change in blister pack image. It seems to have been deleted. I hope this is due to an accidental or outside force uncontrolled by you. If you deleted by concern, you are sensoring and I would be very dissapointed, as should your readers. Please get back to me on removing the blister pack image for the reasons I stated earlier.
71.194.35.184 ( talk) 08:45, 25 October 2008 (UTC)Pam
This is only for white europeans. Other ethnicities have different cycle lengths. I believe this statement is POV. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.181.97.102 ( talk) 12:25, 26 January 2009 (UTC)
can someone please sort out that redlink? I'm really interested in it but I'm afraid i known nothing about horse periods. Andrewjlockley ( talk) 10:40, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
Could someone start something about pseudomenses? I wont have enough time for the next few months. Thanks! -- Enigma ( talk) 01:50, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
The phases section of this article is problematic. It seems to conflate two sets of phases (menstruation, proliferative, and secretory) with (follicular and luteal). In particular, the timetable in the phases section is misleading as it implies none of the phases overlap with other phases even though they are from two different sets of phases. Would anyone object if I clean up this section? Kaldari ( talk) 22:10, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
The four hormones are Estrogen, Progesterone, FSH and LH. What's FH in the diagram? It's not mentioned anywhere in the article. I think it's supposed to be LH (luteinizing hormone). 74.178.214.170 ( talk) 15:41, 19 December 2009 (UTC)
I have some reservations about the new overview image. I have listed them at Talk:Menstruation#Overview image and would appreciate any feedback from others.
Also, this article now defines ovulation only as a phase. Is that the most common way to treat it? I think at least some sources define it as an event instead of a phase, and would like include that point of view in the article. Any objections? Lyrl Talk C 23:23, 20 December 2009 (UTC)
I have modified the image - the version I created is File:MenstrualCycle3.png. Comments and suggestions welcome! Lyrl Talk C 03:30, 5 January 2010 (UTC)
Hi all, I'm a long time reader of wikipedia. I came to this article through the barbie article. What I particularly wanted to find that article is the required amount of body fat to menstrate. Its around 17-22%. So I came to this article to find out more about that.....but to no avail.
So, do you think it'd be possible to mention the required body to fat menstrate? A little more info or something? 75.72.219.104 ( talk) 00:12, 23 February 2010 (UTC)
i have been menstruating for more than 16 days, and for the past 10 days my menstruation was light, smelly and sometimes brownish, is it normal? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 41.241.130.118 ( talk) 10:17, 15 March 2010 (UTC)
Is there a time in the period cycle where a females sex drive is at its peak? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Dlgjslover ( talk • contribs) 05:30, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
Some mention should be made as to how Toxic Shock Syndrome is related to tampon use (especially linked to non-absorbent tampons). ( Sugarless ( talk) 17:12, 27 April 2010 (UTC))
m 21 years old.m getting bleeding during perods only for couple a days.n also from last 2 months my date of periods r getting late by 2 days? watz problem? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 202.133.59.116 ( talk) 07:27, 4 July 2010 (UTC)
what are the symptoms before getting menstrual cyle in the age of 25 . Means i have got irregular periods so i wanted to know the symptons because i sometimes suffer from hormonal changes —Preceding unsigned comment added by 117.192.213.225 ( talk) 16:33, 1 August 2010 (UTC)
I moved the following text, and its references to here: repeated studies have consistently shown the mean and median of sample menstrual cycle data to be around 29.5 days. [1] [2] [3] The references are:
The thing is, I found none of these articles to be able to tell anything more than Chiazze 1968 [6]. The 1937 study seems too old, and the sample size in Cutler 1979 is only one tenth of that in Chiazze. I couldn't get access to Treloar 1967, however, so it would be appreciated if anyone with access had a look at it just in case. Mikael Häggström ( talk) 08:21, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
I seem to vaguely remember some books saying that testosterone levels will vary throughout the menstrual cycle along with estrogen levels (off hand, memory tells me they follow the same path - although not the same levels).
I could not find a reliable source for this, but if anyone finds this it would be useful to mention. If the levels fluctuate enough it might be worth including on some of the graphs shown as well. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.159.238.97 ( talk) 03:19, 18 March 2011 (UTC)
steps should be taken while menstrual flow ? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 27.97.162.99 ( talk) 17:12, 15 July 2011 (UTC)
I was doing some studying about the 'menstrual cycle' and found this in Guyton's Textbook of Medical Physiology (chapter 81):
"The normal reproductive years of the female are characterized by monthly rhythmical changes in the rates of secretion of the female hormones and corresponding physical changes in the ovaries and other sexual organs. This rhythmical pattern is called the female monthly sexual cycle (or, less accurately, the menstrual cycle)."
So I'd like to request a name change for this page to sexual cycle, since that would be scientifically correct. Zaheer12a ( talk) 21:51, 29 January 2012 (UTC)
At the bottom of the Menstrual_cycle#Length section there are statements supporting a Lunar effect on menstrual cycles:
A 1979 study of 305 women found that approximately one-third of the subjects had lunar period cycles in length, i.e., a mean cycle length of 29.5 days plus or minus 1 day. Almost two-thirds of the subjects started their cycle in the brighter half of the lunar cycle, significantly more than would be expected by random distribution. [1] Another study found a statistically significant number of menstruations occurred around the new moon. [2] |
However, in the "Nightlighting and the moon" section it says:
A meta-analysis of studies from 1996 showed no correlation between the human menstrual cycle and the lunar cycle. [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] Dogon villagers did not have electric lighting and spent most nights outdoors, talking and sleeping; so they were an ideal population for detecting a lunar influence; none, however, was found. [9] |
I think the latter has more evidence, since it is a meta-analysis that was done more recently, and therefore I suggest that the text in the former box should be removed from the article. Mikael Häggström ( talk) 16:50, 15 March 2013 (UTC)
OK, ref #1 Straight Dope is out because they claimed incorrectly that a normal period is 28d.
The pubmed studies say:
ref#2:
Abstract
In a selected population of 312 women, prospective menses records were maintained during the autumn of 1977. Women whose menstrual cycle duration approaches the cycle duration of the earth's moon (29.5 days) tend to ovulate in the dark phase of the lunar period. The dark phase encompasses the half-cycle of the month from last quarter, through new moon, to first quarter. Women showing irregular menses also tended to ovulate during the dark phase of the lunar period. PIP:
The possibility of a lunar effect on the menstrual cycle was investigated in 312 university students who kept records of their menstrual cycles. These records were studied for 14 weeks in a double-blind, prospective manner. Of the 312 women, 68 experienced lunar period cycles (29.5 days). Of these 68, 47 menstruated in the light half of the month; therefore, ovulation tended to occur in the dark phase of the lunar period which is defined as the half-cycle of the month from the last quarter, through new moon, to first quarter. Even women with irregular menses (defined for this study as appreciably varied from the 29.5-day lunar cycle) also tended to ovulate during the dark phase of the lunar period. One possible explanation is that a natural rhythm of electromagnetic radiation has its origin in the lunar cycle and may be reflected in phase-locking of the human menstrual cycle.
ref #3
PIP:
A double-blind, prospective study during the fall of 1979 investigated the association between the menstrual cycles of 305 Brooklyn College undergraduates and their associates and the lunar cycles. All subjects were 19-35 years old and using neither OCs (oral contraceptives) nor the IUD. Approximately 1/3 of the subjects had lunar period cycles, i.e., a mean cycle length of 29.5 +/- l day. Almost 2/3 of the subjects started their October cycle in the light 1/2 of the lunar cycle, significantly more than would be expected by random distribution. The author concludes that there is a lunar influence on ovulation.
ref #4
PIP:
A synchronous relationship between the menstrual cycle and lunar rhythm was confirmed by investigative data, laboratory findings, and clinical experience. Among the 826 female volunteers with a normal menstrual cycle (ages 16-25), a large proportion of menstruations occurred around the new moon (28.3%), while at other times during the lunar month, the proportion of menstruations occurring ranged between 8.5-12.6%; the difference was significant (P0.01). The 6-hydroxymelatonin levels in the urina sanguinis of 3 female volunteers reached their zenith prior to and during menstruation, gradually declining to their nadir during ovulation. The difference in 6-hydroxymelatonin between menstruation and ovulation was significant (P0.01). 2 of these 3 volunteers had their zenith in the period of the new moon and nadir 3-4 days prior to the full moon respectively. The lunar-menses-regulatory therapy in treatment of Nephropenic secondary amenorrhea revealed 4 clinical cures, 5 marked effects, 8 menogogue, and 3 ineffective out of 20 cases. (1986)
ref #5
Abstract
Human and animal physiology are subject to seasonal, lunar, and circadian rhythms. Although the seasonal and circadian rhythms have been fairly well described, little is known about the effects of the lunar cycle on the behavior and physiology of humans and animals. The lunar cycle has an impact on human reproduction, in particular fertility, menstruation, and birth rate. Melatonin levels appear to correlate with the menstrual cycle. Admittance to hospitals and emergency units because of various causes (cardiovascular and acute coronary events, variceal hemorrhage, diarrhea, urinary retention) correlated with moon phases. In addition, other events associated with human behavior, such as traffic accidents, crimes, and suicides, appeared to be influenced by the lunar cycle. However, a number of reports find no correlation between the lunar cycle and human reproduction and admittance to clinics and emergency units. Animal studies revealed that the lunar cycle may affect hormonal changes early in phylogenesis (insects). In fish the lunar clock influences reproduction and involves the hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadal axis. In birds, the daily variations in melatonin and corticosterone disappear during full-moon days. The lunar cycle also exerts effects on laboratory rats with regard to taste sensitivity and the ultrastructure of pineal gland cells. Cyclic variations related to the moon's phases in the magnitude of the humoral immune response of mice to polivinylpyrrolidone and sheep erythrocytes were also described. It is suggested that melatonin and endogenous steroids may mediate the described cyclic alterations of physiological processes. The release of neurohormones may be triggered by the electromagnetic radiation and/or the gravitational pull of the moon. Although the exact mechanism of the moon's influence on humans and animals awaits further exploration, knowledge of this kind of biorhythm may be helpful in police surveillance, medical practice, and investigations involving laboratory animals.
And source #6 does not agree: "The Moon Was Full and Nothing Happened" [7]
I'm going to go with the PubMed articles rather than one that, like Straight Dope, has the 28d problem and goes on to say The light of the moon is a very minor source of light in most women's lives, and is no more likely than the moon's gravitational force to have a significant effect on a woman's ovulation. Furthermore, the average menstrual cycle is 28 days but varies from woman to woman and month to month, while the length of the lunar month is a consistent 29.53 days.' It seems that these authors are not even aware that even clams feel the moon effect when put in a box that does not allow "the light of the moon". Gandydancer ( talk) 17:48, 16 March 2013 (UTC)
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This is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 | Archive 3 | → | Archive 5 |
Are there typically two eggs produced in each cycle, one from each ovary, or just one? AxelBoldt 21:15 Jan 2, 2003 (UTC)
It's one egg per menstrual cycle (normally - I'm excluding the use of fertility drugs, abnormal FSH levels, etc.). Left or right ovary is as far as anyone knows, random. -- Someone else 02:55 Jan 8, 2003 (UTC)
Except for false twins when 2 eggs mature at the same time :-)
This said, though the explanation above is very clear to me (I learned that), it is very scientific. Whatabout real life ? I have two ovaries, I feel my body, I talk with my female peers about female stuff; So, I can tell you, I (and many) feel some pain for a couple of hours each time. And each time it's on the opposite side. And each time I wanted to be pregnant, I just waited for the little pain... and there it was ! There's a lot more about menstrual cycle than biological stuff, there are pains, moods, pimples...get real !
Also, it could be mentionned that isolated women such as nons menstrual cycles tend to synchronize.
And this article focuses on human cycle. It would be very interesting to indicate the heat time in animals (or whatever the word is : the fact females of some species accept the males only at the right moment). It is the case for cows, whose cycle is just 28 days as ours...
And, women who are sick or frail because of lack of food, or simply too young (starting age 9-16 ?) or too old (40-55) stop ovulating. Only healthy and able bodies can ovulate.
FWIW: The word for the sensation of pain at ovulation is "Mittleschmertz".
The 'scientific' word for the period of sexual receptivity (heat) is "estrus", and animals in which this is a prominent feature are usually said to have "estrous" (adjectival form) cycles rather than menstrual cycles. And sometimes a coin flip produces the sequence HTHTHT <G> -- Someone else 21:48 Jan 8, 2003 (UTC)
Do cows menstruate, I mean with blood and everything? AxelBoldt 21:45 Jan 8, 2003 (UTC)
Same thing happened to me, definitely dogs have periods. This article is mistaken in that respect.
I've read that cats dont have a menopause -- but I don't know about the blood. -- Tarquin 21:53 Jan 8, 2003 (UTC)
I saw a cat having her period once. I'm really hoping she wasn't simply bleeding from there... Also, it was a pregnant cat, so perhaps that would actually dis-support the idea that she's menstruating.
if most other mammals don't bleed, this raises the question -- why do we? What purpose does it serve? Why have we developed this? I think I'll rearrange a bit tomorrow & put some headings in. But this article is shaping up really nicely! :-) -- Tarquin
The women, the rules and the moon
the researchers for a long time raised the question of sexuality specific to our species, and more precisely the characteristics of female sexuality. The most marked characteristics were the absence of oestrus, the permanent receptivity of the human woman. If there are primates which resemble to us in this respect - especially at species monogamists - that usual, and if is not never marked. An explanation, advanced by Desmond Morris, would be that the woman seeks to keep a man by a more intense and more continuous sexual activity. It was also noticed that the absence of oestrus makes be sure to impregnate his partner, the man must maintain sexual intercourse with it for one period longer than in our cousins. Knight finds these explanations not very convincing. What is marked in the female of our species, he says, is not his constant receptivity, but rather the moment when it is not very receptive - the menstruation. He writes: Despite oestrus loss, hormonally controlled sexual signals are not entirely missing from the human female menstrual cycle. One the contrary, menstruation in human has been accentuated with an external display. It is menstruation rather than ovulation that the human female experiments her behaviour have hormonally influenced to has some degree. Woman lose considerably more blood during menstruation than does any other primate. This shedding of blood, although small, represents a significant loss - has loss which has to Be made good by additional food intake, particularly of iron. The advantage of this has not yet been explained.
(Knight, 1991) menstruation function like a signal. It will say to the men that the woman refuses the sexual intimacy. He notes initially that, if the cycle of fruitfulness is not necessarily related to the phases of the moon - the periodicity of the primates is variable - at the human woman, the typical cycle is about 28,5 days - i.e., that it can coincide very exactly with the lunar cycle. Then, Knight quotes work on the synchronization of periods: certain researchers discovered that when women spend enough time together - in a pension, for example, or a university dortoire, they tend to have their periods at the same time.
Does being on your period and having sex with no condom higher or lower the chances of getting pregnant?
The previous paragraph (and the main article) both imply that it is possible to become pregnant while one is menstruating (say, in the first week, to be specific). But this is hard to understand, given the mechanism for the delivery and attachment of a fertilized egg. I have not been able to find references elsewhere on the Web to this idea. Can someone provide some reliable or credible justification? David 19:25, 29 May 2004 (UTC)
Okay, that makes sense. But still, regardless of hormone levels, how can the fertilized egg implant itself when the uteral lining is being shed? And if, by some miracle, it did, how would the egg grow without the nutrition that the lining provides? David 15:18, 31 May 2004 (UTC)
"Worldwide, various cultures have experienced varying attitudes toward menstruation. The ?bleeding time? or ?moon time? has been viewed as "sacred" to an impure time, as well as everything in between. Contemporary society views this significant act of ?letting go? as an "unclean" end of the continuum, instead of viewing it as a part of a cyclic process of life and death, birth and rebirth.
Unfortunately, women have come to know and experience menstruation as the "the curse", something dirty and to be ashamed of; an attitude which society encourages and endorses?and which is constantly reinforced whenever broadcast media airs commercials for tampons and medications for PMS etc. Women are constantly being reminded in front of their partners, children, peers and co-workers that they are the weaker sex because of menstruation.
Menstruation, in fact is a time of great intuitive power. This phase is not a time to make changes; however, it is time to reflect on changes that need to be made in the next cycle. Persons who doubt the validity of such statements are encouraged to seek more information about women?s cycles as they are defined and written about by women who adhere to their cyclic nature. There is a wealth of information about this on the Internet. Women need to be aware that the less education that they have about their reproductive and hormonal systems, the more they are likely to be manipulated by an overzealous pharmaceutical industry that stands to profit greatly from their lack of knowledge."
1. This is not NPOV. 2. If reworded, this should rather go into the menstruation article. 3. The last paragraph is strawmanning propaganda for "natural medicines" or something like that. David.Monniaux 00:33, 4 Apr 2004 (UTC)
" Menstruating women need to be aware that during the post-ovulatory phase of their cycle, their body systems are slowing down; as hormone levels are dropping, the immune system is also inhibited. Medications and other substances may have more of an adverse affect on women?s mental/emotional state than at other phases of the cycle. Since the body is slowing down, it is also important that women slow down mentally, emotionally and physically so as not to put undue stress on themselves. Menstruation is a time of ?letting go? ? not only of the uterine lining, but of mental and emotional issues; it is a time of release ? necessary so that a woman may start a new cycle after her menses has ended on all levels. Menstruation is part of a cyclic progression in women?s lives that honors life and all creation. Women are the human replicate of the Goddess on earth. Menstruating women are the font for the survival of humankind.
During the paramenstrum; pre-menstrual and bleeding phase, women will experience heightened sensitivity, are more aware, intuitive, psychic and powerful. If a woman does not abide with her body?s natural inclinations during this phase, she may experience adverse reactions; such as abdominal pain, migraine headache, depression and irritability."
Some more non NPOV + propaganda stuff. David.Monniaux 00:34, 4 Apr 2004 (UTC)
Anyhow, I recommand a new article named Menstruation to include all the cultural aspects as in <nowiki de:Menstruation</nowiki>
See "What links here": there are many items regarding the simple fact of "menstruation", pretty far away of a "cycle" -- Robodoc.at 10:58, 1 May 2004 (UTC)
Adha does literaly means 'a hurt'! Why did you change the text? Do you understand Arabic? A. 04:42, 12 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Hi. I just read the main article as well as some associated articles. It was unclear to me what happens to the egg that is travelling down the Fallopian tube but is not fertilized. Does it finishes its journey and ends up being eliminated along with the endometrium or does it stay in the tube and is somehow destroyed? As a matter of fact, I vaguely remember reading somewhere that the second hypothesis is what happens, and that the "reabsorption" of the egg by the female organism would be responsible for PMS. Is there any truth in this? You can probably tell that I know squad about the topic, but maybe this article or some of the associated ones could use some clarifying on what exactly happens to the unfertilized egg in its fruitless trip accross the Fallopian tube. Regards, Redux 19:32, 4 Oct 2004 (UTC)
I noticed that this is a featured article but hope it is ok to make some extensive changes. I tried to preserve all the information that had already been accumulated. In the section on 'Islam and menstruation' I removed a section that had been verbatim taken from another website, but the link to the website has been incorporated for reference. Ekem 17:38, 9 Apr 2005 (UTC)
I removed the following recently added sentences here because they may not be correct and were expressed clumsily. I think the ideas may be good, and probably worth including but we need to make it more specific and verified.
already "banked" in the ovary. As all these proto-eggs are present in the body from ((early in fetal development-- not birth)), and wait decades until they are used to create a new human life, this has implications for chromosomal damage. (this is a bit vague) Compare this to sperm, which are created fresh daily. A woman's exposure to radioactivity (including X-rays) and environmental toxin has a cumulative effect on her fertility, arguably more so than on that of men. (I have not seen direct evidence for this statement; is it just speculation or can you cite support?)
It might be more precise and accurate to say, As a woman's total egg supply is formed in fetal life, to be ovulated decades later, it has been suggested that this long life-time may make the chromatin of eggs more vulnerable to division problems, breakage, and mutation than the chromatin of sperm, which are produced continuously during a man's reproductive life. This possibility is supported by the observation that conceptuses and infants of older mothers have higher rates of chromosome abnormalities than those of older fathers.
I'm not so concerned about whose wording we use as that the facts are correct, and not just vaguely "arguable". I cannot think of any examples of environmental toxins causing damage to egg chromatin, and think it unlikely that radiation exposure plays any role in the age-related chromosome abnormalities. I am confident that the latter version is supportable but not so sure about the former. Further facts welcome. alteripse 01:31, 2 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Your version sounds eminently sensible to me! I have no further facts to offer. From your technical language, i am sure you have far more detailed knowledge to draw on than I do. Please feel free to insert your changed sentences. Many thanks for your work. BrainyBabe 01:50, 2 Jun 2005 (UTC)
I would like to see a paragraph on the least fertile time in the menstrual cycle. The discussion always focusses on the most fertile time, never the least. Personally, this is important for me because I have sex with my girl friend only in the one or two days following full onset of menstruation, in the belief that that is the least fertile time. Surely some contributor to Wikipedia has access to some truly authoritative information on this important question. David 18:23, 3 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Hmmm, right. Normally, the fertility is around 14 days before the next periods. Or 14 days after the first day of past periods. The key is to see when the middle just is and to avoid this time area. You may note it by several manners
If you take temperature, it will be low for a certain number of days. Then, it will suddently go up by half a degree. Then stay up till the end of the cycle. The ovulation is on the day just before the temperature going up (the last day with low temperature). Of course, you can not guess that day. So, normally, you have 14 days of low temperature (beginning on first day of periods), followed by 14 days of higher temperature (ending on the day just before the periods or first day).
On the previous days before the temperature goes up, the white substance that gets out of vagina will get sticky. If there is no substance at all, sperm survive 24 hours. Not much. If there is a lot of substance, they survive up to 4 days. The ovule survives usually only 24 hours.
So if you make love at the beginning of the cycle, you should feel secure for *less* than a week after the periods stopped. I would say only 5-6 days. No more. As soon as there is white substance, protect yourself. Even if ovulation is 3-4 days later, the sperm might survive long enough, so be careful. So, only 5-6 days of secure time on a regular 28 days cycle. Day 5 till day 10.
Then, your girlfriend may note when the ovulation occur. It is the day just before the temperature going up. Usually, lots of white substance. Sometimes (in particular for those already mom), there is a tiny bit of blood loss. Sometimes, we also feel a bit of pain on one side for an hour or so. The uterus is also different, but most women do not want to check this. The best way to be sure when the ovulation occured is by temperature, but all the other information is good to confirm. After the ovulation, wait at least 3 days. At least. I'd say it would be okay to drop plastic stuff while she has been at least 4 days on higher temperature. If she is on a regular cycle, that should give you from day 19 possibly till day 27. There is normally always 14 days between ovulation and next periods. So, you have 7-8 good.
If she has an irregular cycle, always remember that the second part is the one fixed (always 14 days). The first part of the cycle is the one varying. If she is on a 3 weeks cycle, avoid making love just after the periods for at least 2 weeks without protection, or just make it only once just after the bleeding has stopped. If she is on a 5 weeks periods, yeah, champaign !!! you have 10-14 days fun.
Is that clear ?
Anthere 19:13, 3 Jun 2005 (UTC)
by the way, may I inquire why the article is protected ? Ant
I would like to clear up the issue of the body basal temperature being low from onset of the period until a rise during ovulation. There is no typical ovulation schedule and each woman has a different cycle unique to her own physiology. I for instance run a temp of 99.0 F during my period. After it goes back to normal and then I only experience a slight uptake in my temperature. A menstrual cycle is unique to each woman. There is no "safe" time to have intercourse and pregnancy is entirely possible during mensturation. As I said a few times already it depends on the woman's unique physiology and cycle time- if she has a short cycle - and you have intercourse during her period- if conditions are right sperm can live in the cervical mucous for up to a week and she can then become pregnant.
Not too long ago, it was proven that eggs do form after birth. (surprise!) I've lost the reference though, and I'm sure somebody will revert if I don't provide it. AlbertCahalan 18:39, 4 Jun 2005 (UTC)
You may be correct that someone has reported evidence of postnatal new egg development, but unless you can provide a reference that seems convincing, we should still go by the current consensus on the topic as reflected by the major textbooks on the topic. E.g. Johnson & Everitt, Essential Reproduction, Blackwell Science, 2000, page 14: ...in the female all the oogonial germ cells cease dividing mitotically either before birth (human, cow, sheep, goat, mouse) or shortly thereafter (rat, pig, cat, rabbit, hamster) to enter into their first meiotic division, thereby becoming primary oocytes.... The consequence of this early termination of mitosis is that, by the time of birth, a woman has all the oocytes within her ovaries that she will ever have. We can update articles to reflect brand new research as soon as it can be verified. Don't act persecuted, just find a source. alteripse 19:47, 4 Jun 2005 (UTC)
http://www.genomenewsnetwork.org/articles/2004/03/10/eggs.php http://www.newsday.com/news/health/ny-hseggs0311,0,7536500.story?coll=ny-health-headlines http://www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm?hint=2&DR_ID=22627
Three articles on the reproductive experiment on mice that is convincing evidence that mammals contiue to produce new eggs. I suggest that this article at least be updated to present this new evidence as an alternative to aging textbook material. The static egg count theory need not be discarded until studies of human egg production have been verified, but I see no benefit of not including this information as well. leeach 3:25, 30 Aug 2005 (UTC)
I just added a link to folliculogenesis in the follicular stage section (I think I forgot to log in when I did it). I wanted to point out that the image used to depict the ovarian histology in the article is erroneous. A lot of undergraduate biology books use some version of the diagram, but as I understand it follicle growth is a stacked process that runs the action-packed portion of its course in about ninety days, or three menstrual cycles. If anybody can find a more representative one... - D. Wu 02:45, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
I'd like to use this as one of the daily featured articles on the main page, but the introduction needs to be beefed up a bit first. Would someone care to do the honors? →Raul654 18:59, August 12, 2005 (UTC)
Shouldn't it make sense that that "menstruation" stage occurs last, following the "luteal phase"? The picture supports this point, as does the first time the menstrual cycle occurs--the corpus luteum cannot degrade if it is not formed first in the previous phase. unless the present order is the scientifically accepted order, i propose it be changed to follicular phase->ovulation->luteal phase->menstruation. -- Bubbachuck 18:31, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
Hi, when an article is nominated for featured status, there is a page where users leave comments on whether they support or object to the nomination. Where is that particular page for this article? I have been unable to find it.
the usual mix up - i doubt any woman would want to use a menstrual cup out of silicon !!
ahpook 11:41, 30 August 2005 (UTC)
New eggs continue to develop in adult mice this may only effect animals that undergo an estrus cycle but it would be interesting to mention it here. Opinions? -- Rakista 16:21, 30 August 2005 (UTC)
If mice don't menstrate then I would not confuse things by putting it here. alteripse 16:40, 30 August 2005 (UTC)
I'm not sure whether 'mene' in Greek means moon. I thought that moon in Greek was 'seléne' or 'selaîna' and that 'mén' meant month. I'll try to look into this today or within this week. Perhaps it is some ancient or rare word which I don't know. Tell me if I am wrong.
How did this make featured article? I don't mean to be negative (and of course I intend to add to it to improve what I deem as insufficiencies) but it seems to be rather light on information (for a featured article). There's a whole wealth of knowledge on superstitions on menstruation. I thought the article was just giving a short summary because there's a full article on that topic, but nothing's linked! (Compare this to the anarcho-capitalism article, about which far fewer people would be capable of contributing.) All it has is a sentence about social perception of menstruation. Is there a record of the nomination? I clicked the above link and it didn't take me to a nomination page. MrVoluntarist 00:18, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
according to the page, "A regular menstrual cycle as described here only occurs in the great apes. Menstrual cycles vary in length from an average of 29 days in orangutans to an average of 37 days in chimpanzees."
though i do not know about bonobos, i am absolutely certain that common chimpanzees have estrus, not menstrual cycles. i will attempt to verify whether or not this is the case with bonobos as well. what source makes the claim that chimpanzees menstruate? thanks.-- Gozar 15:30, 8 September 2005 (UTC)
interesting. well, i was wrong, thank you for the info. -- Gozar 13:02, 9 September 2005 (UTC)
Does anybody know why, when a group of women live within close proximity of each other, their cycles start to begin and end at the same time? I know that this happens. I live in a dorm with three other girls. I have a 21 day cycle. Now, they do too. 129.252.234.61 06:24, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
Please look at this website or just google (women synchronize menstruation)
http://www.wonderquest.com/pheromone.htm
This is an important issue that we must address for a complete discussion of this topic.
The basic point is the following:
pheromones gradually effect the menstrual cycle of a woman eventually synchronizing the periods of all the women living together.
Furthermore, this website
http://www.experimentarium.dk/uk/naturvidenskab_og_teknik/artikler/artikel.140.html
Asserts that women's menstrual cycles are also influenced by pheromones that a man secrets and that women's sense of smell is more receptive to these types of pheromones that are given off in sweat.
A caveat to all this:
Some believe that the research supporting this is not credible see the following article:
http://www.straightdope.com/columns/021220.html
They cite methodological errors, statistical coincidence and eventual divergence due to differing cycle lengths.
ARM 04:17, 9 November 2005 (UTC)
Connecting menstrual cycle with moon apears under the title of mysticism.Webster's Third provides three definitions for Mysticism the third being "vague speculation, belief without foundation.".The word is used here in this sesnse.I guess we can find a better title to describe it , specially because the words Mysticism and mystic are defined in wikipedia in a very different way.The terms moon time and lunar period etc arose from various folk cultures (specialy those with a goddess religeon) and found their way to popular culture partly as euphemisms.So I suggest replacing the title with Ancient Goddess religeons or something like that. Pasha 01:05, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
Is there a reference for this:
" Many women, after a period of not being exposed to artificial nighttime lighting, find their menstrual cycles begin to occur in rhythm with the lunar cycle. " Bubba73 (talk), 21:38, 1 December 2005 (UTC)
I'm not sure how accurate the quotes from Leviticus are in representing the "Christian" view of menstruation. I thought the laws in Leviticus (the Kosher laws, instructions to not wear clothing of mixed fabrics, etc.) were not followed at all by most Christians?
Justification for removal of text
In response to the above question I removed the following text.
Menstruation is discussed in the third book of the Hebrew Bible, Leviticus, which details the Christian Holiness Code. Leviticus 15:19 states "And if a woman have an issue, and her issue in her flesh be blo od, she shall be put apart seven days: and whosoever toucheth her shall be unclean until the even." http://www.carm.org/kjv/Lev/Lev_15.htm
Further penalties are imposed on those who would engage in sexual intercourse with a woman during her menstrual cycle.
Leviticus 18:19 instructs "You shall not approach a woman to uncover her nakedness while she is in her menstrual uncleanness", while Leviticus 20:18 specifies this code further: "And if a man shall lie with a woman having her sickness, and shall uncover her nakedness; he hath discovered her fountain, and she hath uncovered the fountain of her blood: and both of them shall be cut off from among their people". http://www.carm.org/kjv/Lev/Lev_20.htm
Christian doctrine is that Christ freed us from adherence to the Levitical laws as a way to maintain a right relationship with God. If a user knows of a Christian sect that teaches observation of these Levitical laws, we can reinsert it with the mention that it is held only among the whateverites.
Note to anonymous inserter. Please give us a source. I think you are a lone crank, not representing any significant Christian community. Do not re-insert until you can tell us which Christian sects support this, not which you think should support it. alteripse 20:34, 29 December 2005 (UTC)
Let me rephrase this: Does anyone else think we should not spin off all the religious discussion into a separate article on Religious views of menstruation? alteripse 06:47, 24 December 2005 (UTC)
Justification for re-addition In response to: "I'm not sure how accurate the quotes from Leviticus are in representing the "Christian" view of menstruation. I thought the laws in Leviticus (the Kosher laws, instructions to not wear clothing of mixed fabrics, etc.) were not followed at all by most Christians?"
As defined by wikipedia, the [bible] "is the revealed word of God or an authoritative record of the relationship between God, the world and humankind", thus by definition, any laws it decrees upon menstruation are the Christian view of menstruation. Whether or not a Christian actually follows the law as written does not change the fact that the law is a part of the sacred scripture. Furthermore, the information provided was worded so as to be consistent with the information provided under Islamic and Judaic tradition. re: "Christian doctrine is that Christ freed us from adherence to the Levitical laws as a way to maintain a right relationship with God". Please cite the Bible passage or passages indicating which Old Testament laws were made obsolete by Christ. I will be adding the text back in based on the argument that the passages are quoted verbatim from the Bible which is considered the authoritive Christian view. The adherence to those passages is a seperate issue.
See above. Name a Christian sect that teaches and observes this aspect of the Levitical laws. Your claims above deliberately misrepresent the sources. An encyclopedia is not where you persuade other people that only you have the correct understanding of Christianity. Just cite who else supports and teaches this if I am mistaken? alteripse 20:41, 29 December 2005 (UTC)
Where did I say that I have the correct understanding of Christianity? The logic is simple: The Bible is the sacred text of Christians. The Bible has specific text referring to menstruation. And so I've quoted those statements as a resource of the the Bible's view of menstruation. To clarify that not all Christians follow this part of the Bible, a notation was made at the end, but the underlying fact remains that the Bible has text referring to menstruation. I am saying "this is what is written in the bible, but yet you're interpreting it as me saying "this is what Christians believe".
To our exasperating anonymous inserter: You have done nothing except claim that "logically" Christians should follow levitical laws. In reality, 99.99999% don't teach it, don't follow it, have never even heard of it, and would laugh out loud at your claim that they should "logically" do so. Even your claim about the Seventh Day Adventists is demonstrably false: there is no, repeat NO, evidence that they follow or teach levitical laws about menstruation. I assumed you had some weird independent 25 person congregation in mind, but you can't even truthfully point to a single Christian church that actually teaches and follows the levitical menstruation rules, can you!? Why are you so selfishly insistent in breaking our rules and thwarting our purposes here? Why not start your own church or at least your own website based on your own interpretation of the need for the levitical menstrual laws? alteripse 03:19, 30 December 2005 (UTC)
As a Christian, I believe that Christ's forgiving love and sacrificial death freed us from the literal practice of Old Testament law. Jesus overcame the prejudice of female blood when he healed the bleeding woman, Mark 5:25-34. Jesus was not embarrassed and treated her with respect. Jesus actions give me freedom from Leviticus. CoralieK 11:22, 1 May 2007 (UTC)
Linked directly to quote. Removed text relating to Doctor's interpretation, as it did not add any relevancy.
Really? Do we want to include slang terms for all devices? I have removed it, but please feel free to reinstate if I have missed something. It happens. 22:58, 29 December 2005 (UTC) (Skittle)
While this type of software seems relevant to the article, they seem to be taking over the external links section. We now have links to menstrual cycle calendars at babymed.com, procod.com, bloodays.com, ovulation-calculator.com, perimon.com, and kyberdigi.cz
Another menstrual calendar - ovusoft.com - used to be there, but was deleted in the last edit with no explanation.
And I'm sure there are many more out there. It doesn't seem practical to include them all, so I'm leaning towards removing all of them from the links section. I'm interested to see if others have any alternate suggestions, though. Lyrl 14:33, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
Pick the best. Delete the rest. alteripse 16:42, 18 February 2006 (UTC)
I'm interested in why this entire cycle might have evolved as such in the first place, instead of other (theoretical) possibilities--shouldn't there be a section in the article about theories concerning the possible evolutionary pathways toward the menstrual cycle? (Either that, or I didn't look hard enough.) ~ GMH talk to me 08:25, 26 February 2006 (UTC)
My understanding was a little different than that provided in the edit comments. The MOST fertile time is from three days before ovulation, to the day of ovulation (so only four days - though if one is avoiding pregnancy, the risky window is more like 8-10 days). But if a woman doesn't know when she ovulates, or how long her luteal phase is, things become much more fuzzy. 10-16 day luteal phase is considered normal. If a woman has a 10 day luteal phase, she is still in her 'most fertile' time 10 days before her period (the day of ovulation). If a woman has a 16 day luteal phase, she begins her 'most fertile' time 19 days before her period (16 day luteal phase + 3 day average sperm life = 19). Lyrl 02:35, 28 February 2006 (UTC)
In the section titled "Etymology and the lunar month" the following statement appears:
"Many women, when not being exposed to artificial nighttime lighting, find that their menstrual cycles occur in rhythm with the lunar cycle."
That the amount or quality of light reflected from the surface of the moon can influence menstruation is an extraordinary claim. I don't believe it should be allowed to stand unsupported. Is there any legitimate research available in support of this claim? If not, I believe the statement should be struck.
Thanks.
Are there any wikipedian academics out there looking into this? I ask because I've noticed the considerably small amount of theories on the subject and feel that I came upon an insight that may be useful for anyone interested in reasearching it and presenting it to the scientific community.
This is an insight I have gained upon observing animal behavior, specifically, my two cats. I've had a siamese cat for years now and she has become very attached to me. I read in the wikipedia page that siamese usually attach themselves to one member of the household which is me. Recently I welcomed a cat that was found on the street. I found their interaction very interesting, as it seemed my siamese became immediatly jealous of the other cat whenever she would move near me. Soon enough, the cat I had recently adopted began go through heat. During this time, my siamese, whenever the other cat would appear, my siamese would automatically pretend to go in heat. In fact, her movements became even more exaggerated than when she was actually in heat. I know that this wasnt genuine because this would only happen whenever the other cat's presence would be known.
However, as time went by, the siamese's jealousy had made her heat authentic. After a while to this day, both cats have synchronized heat seasons.
I think this could be a valuable observation for human females in their synchronization. My point is, I believe that the aspect of competition among females is the main factor in altering their psychology, which in turn affects their menstrual cycles. It's been said that synchronized cycles are most common among single women that live together as well as womes who "party" together. I believe that the synchronization of their menstrual cycles occurs to provoke a "leveling" of the playing field. An unconscious evolutionary tool optimizing the mating process.
I would have liked to follow up on this but biology is nowhere near my field. What do you guys think?~ Waking
A search of PubMed seems indicate following sequence of recent debate:
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link)The only comment I would add is with ragard to User:Waking's comments above: I was given to understand that this also was seen with nuns in convents, who presumeably are not competing for " a "leveling" of the playing field. An unconscious evolutionary tool optimizing the mating process". David Ruben Talk 00:51, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
Even though it is untasteful, but can there be pictures of menstrul blood, or a bloody vagina, or maybe a comparison with real blood in beakers? or bloody feminine hygine products? We males dont have vaginas to experiance and know what menstration is and looks like. It can be glowing and pulsating red light as far as this article explains. Doesnt wikipedia have a be bold policy? Normal reproductive textbooks (HS level and below) dont ever show photos of the blood. I think wikipedia should be bold and put some up. Patcat88 16:56, 30 April 2006 (UTC)
For those interested in imagery of menstruation, the web site [4] has photos that explore the meaning and symbology of menstruation. Humans live through meaning, see Victor Frankl, ISBN 0-671-24422-1 Pbk. The aim is to give women, and men, positive and fun images for this natural function. CoralieK 11:08, 1 May 2007 (UTC)
I have found an error I would like someone to check out if possible. The information doesn't seem the correlate, and if it does, please inform. Please read the following:
'The fertile window' is the topic of the section.
'Sperm survive inside a woman for --->669,999<--- days on average, with survival time up to five days considered normal.' Is the figure 669,999 correct? Thank you. 72.244.150.131 15:28, 7 May 2006 (UTC)
This is a pet peeve of mine, but I made a minor change of wording in the "sea sponges" section of the "Menstrual Products" subheading. I would just like you all to know from a certified science nerd that sponges are not "plant-like" in any way, nor should they be labeled as such. I changed the wording from "from plant-like animals" to "from the harvested skeletons of animals" because frankly, if people don't know how unsentient sponges are, then we have bigger socioeconomic problems than menstrual products.
Yes, I know the wording sounds harsher, but it's science and it's fact. And most women who would even consider the sponge would get past the fact that it's an animal and look to the environmental and economic benefits. -- —Preceding unsigned comment added by Lady Voldything ( talk • contribs)
Do the areola, lips, etc. change sizes periodically according to the menstrual cycle?
I am a new user - I usually only make minor edits, but I came across this page and was very distressed to see that someone has erased the whole page and had left the words
"Spongeman was here"
and nothing else except for the first image of the menstrual cycle.
I really am unfamiliar with major edits, so to make a small remedy for the time being, I copied and pasted the last version before the vandalism - it's not in the proper setup, but I think all of the information is there.
BTW, good catch on the duplication Lyrl. A lot didn't seem right about that addition, but I'm not familiar enough with this article to have caught that. Skittle 13:26, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
I see this has been suggested before ( #Menstruation as a new Article). Noticing that all the other phases (follicular, ovulation, luteal) now have their own article, I think it's a good time to spin off "menstruation" into its own article. I'm thinking about taking some information from the "Overview", "menstruation", "physical expeItalic textrience", "menstrual products", and "culture and menstruation" for the spin-off article. Any comments? Lyrl Talk Contribs 17:06, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
This page is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
"The corpus luteum is the solid body formed in the ovaries after the egg has been released from the fallopian tube which continues to grow and divide for a while." Sorry to be a grammarian, but exactly what is it that continues to grow and divide for a while? The corpus luteum or the egg? (I presume it isn't the fallopian tube.) -- Gyrofrog (talk) 02:26, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
I think the figure in this article is incorrect on a few points:
Desiderius 8:44, 10 May 2007 (UTC)
Not only that, but the image gives off the wrong impression that the follicle goes from a primordial follicle to a tertiary follicle in the first days of the menstrual cycle. That is wrong since it takes almost a year for the follicle to attain the antral stage (and then be recruited and selected as the dominant follicle that will undergo ovulation). The timescale from the recruitment of the primordial follicle all the way to ovulation actually takes about 375 days! (c.f. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folliculogenesis). This is a commone mistake and even some textbooks have it. The first three follicles must be changed to smaller versions of the fourth one with a smaller antrum. There is a diagram in the folliculogenesis page. Notice how the follicle is already "grown-up" when it reaches the selection window to enter the ovarian cycle? I already messaged the creator of the picture but he never answered...
Does anyone have a better diagram or could anyone make one? I think it's pretty important. Horia 03:14, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
Sorry, but what are the rules for creating an image for an article? I suspect that images, like article text, must follow the No original research rule. As such I would suggest that all of the data that are plotted need to come from reliable, verifiable, secondary sources as defined by official policy. So, number one I think the image needs references (what data support these claims?), and number two, with no offense meant, I don't think that it's okay for a user to change the image based on their own experience of actual temperature charts--that would qualify as original research. Please, anyone, let me know if I'm not correct, or what the policies are. All good-faith feedback is welcome. Ehb ( talk) 16:42, 3 July 2008 (UTC)
While it's certainly not unheard of for a girl to first menstruate at the age of 8, this is considered precocious (Cesario & Hughes 2007, J Obstet Gynecol Neonatal Nurs 36:263-274). In recent study of over 700 girls designed to study girls with early menarche, the youngest girl to menstruate was 9.4 years at menarche (Sloboda et al. 2007, J Clin Endocrinol Metab 92:46-50).
The references I've provided above suggest that this statement is inaccurate as it stands. Unfortunately, I do not have good data on what should be considered normal. In things of this nature I have noticed that there is often a tendancy to report that a certain range is normal, possibly so as not to make people worry that they are abnormal. However, to say that any age range is "normal" is incomplete unless normality is defined. In a sample of one-million, it might be "normal" to have one girl who reaches menarche at age 5, and another not until 25. But that doesn't mean that "5-25" is the "normal" range.
My suggestion is to report the mean age of menarche with the standard deviation, based on one or (hopefully) more solid sources, and then perhaps to add a statement mentioning that the distribution is highly variable.
Ehb 17:47, 4 June 2007 (UTC)
This article has been removed from Category:Fertility awareness as part of a planned deletion of Category:Periodic abstinence, Category:Fertility awareness, and Category:Natural family planning - articles from those categories will be merged into the new Category:Fertility tracking. Category:Fertility tracking is currently a subcategory of Category:Menstruation. Please bring up any concerns related to this merger at Category talk:Fertility tracking. If there are no objections within four days, the three categories proposed for deletion will be tagged for speedy deletion. Lyrl Talk C 22:47, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
The introduction says "occurs in the females of human beings and other great apes". The section "Menstrual cycles in other mammals" states that estrus cycles should not be confused with menstrual cycles, then appears to give the duration of estrus for chimpanzees and orangutans. This is either ambiguous (do apes have menstrual or estrus cycles?) or flat out wrong. 75.198.89.65 04:14, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
The article states: It is unusual for a woman to experience cycle length variations of less than four days.
I would say, it is rather very usual.—Preceding unsigned comment added by Kasiata ( talk • contribs) 08:46, 3 September 2007
The article reads that the Fallopian tubes need to capture the ovum...however it is the fimbrae that catch the ovum, which then travels through the Fallopian tubes. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Chem Lady ( talk • contribs) 04:15, 22 October 2007 (UTC)
I googled a bit to find explanations why in the course of evolution (some) primates developed the menstrual cycle and other species not, but I could not find any. Given the fact that a non-negligible share of women suffer of dysmenorrhea to a degree that they are severely constricted in activities of every-day life as well as their work, the "invention" of the menstrual cycle simply seems to be a maladaption. Maybe someone can write a bit on the current scientific status of this issue. 84.163.85.165 ( talk) 19:45, 24 November 2007 (UTC)
Evolution is a controversial theory and only 55% of people believe it according to a 1993 poll, i think its best to not mention it at all to be honest considering wiki's neutrality and the amount it could spin-off topic.
75.179.163.66 ( talk) 05:14, 2 May 2009 (UTC) Jade Rat
This sentence "Sperm survive inside a woman for 3 days on average, with survival time up to five days considered normal" seems a bit off. It states the average as 3 days, while survival up to 5 days considered normal. would normal not usually mean average? should it not state that 5 days is the maximum it can survive?
The image at the top of the article was replaced with a revised version yesterday. I had both some concerns and some positives comments on the changes:
The improvements to the figure are greatly appreciated, but it concerns me they were apparently done to the old image file with the several inaccuracies addressed above rather than to the corrected version. Lyrl Talk C 19:45, 24 March 2008 (UTC)
I have a question, when you first get your period, does it come every month, because ive had my period twice already, and i first got it in january. I'm not getting it every month. If you have the answer to my question, please respond. 76.28.39.43 ( talk) 03:40, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
I know that sound unusual but I was looking for mensuration cycle/mensuration/MC etc for their cultural beliefs and significance. Can we have a MC in popular culture like heading :):) 59.95.104.87 ( talk) 18:21, 27 July 2008 (UTC)Maddy, 11.51pm,27 July 2008.
Is it possible to have your period when you're pregnant? Like you could miss your first one, but have your second one? I thought I could find the answer here but I couldn't find anything. -- 86.156.114.22 ( talk) 20:05, 11 September 2008 (UTC)
What is with these two sections? Is it just me or are they mixed up? Changed arround.
Doc James ( talk) 02:13, 20 September 2008 (UTC)
Could the notes section not be combined into the rest of it? And needs to be better referenced. A section on history and society would be great. There are dozens of books on this topic. It mainly just covers the medical aspect and doesn't give a full overview of the menstrual cycle.
The discussion of estrogen surges, FSH, LH, etc. in the "hormonal control" section seems, to me, to be redundant with the "follicular phase" and "luteal phase" sections. I think the "control" section was there first, and as the article developed the material was added to the "phase" section, which I think is a more natural place for it.
I would like to remove most of the "control" section, leaving just "effects on other systems" (or some other title) as its own section (which will need some expansion). Any thoughts on this plan? Lyrl Talk C 17:32, 21 September 2008 (UTC)
Still requesting change in blister pack image. It seems to have been deleted. I hope this is due to an accidental or outside force uncontrolled by you. If you deleted by concern, you are sensoring and I would be very dissapointed, as should your readers. Please get back to me on removing the blister pack image for the reasons I stated earlier.
71.194.35.184 ( talk) 08:45, 25 October 2008 (UTC)Pam
This is only for white europeans. Other ethnicities have different cycle lengths. I believe this statement is POV. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.181.97.102 ( talk) 12:25, 26 January 2009 (UTC)
can someone please sort out that redlink? I'm really interested in it but I'm afraid i known nothing about horse periods. Andrewjlockley ( talk) 10:40, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
Could someone start something about pseudomenses? I wont have enough time for the next few months. Thanks! -- Enigma ( talk) 01:50, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
The phases section of this article is problematic. It seems to conflate two sets of phases (menstruation, proliferative, and secretory) with (follicular and luteal). In particular, the timetable in the phases section is misleading as it implies none of the phases overlap with other phases even though they are from two different sets of phases. Would anyone object if I clean up this section? Kaldari ( talk) 22:10, 10 December 2009 (UTC)
The four hormones are Estrogen, Progesterone, FSH and LH. What's FH in the diagram? It's not mentioned anywhere in the article. I think it's supposed to be LH (luteinizing hormone). 74.178.214.170 ( talk) 15:41, 19 December 2009 (UTC)
I have some reservations about the new overview image. I have listed them at Talk:Menstruation#Overview image and would appreciate any feedback from others.
Also, this article now defines ovulation only as a phase. Is that the most common way to treat it? I think at least some sources define it as an event instead of a phase, and would like include that point of view in the article. Any objections? Lyrl Talk C 23:23, 20 December 2009 (UTC)
I have modified the image - the version I created is File:MenstrualCycle3.png. Comments and suggestions welcome! Lyrl Talk C 03:30, 5 January 2010 (UTC)
Hi all, I'm a long time reader of wikipedia. I came to this article through the barbie article. What I particularly wanted to find that article is the required amount of body fat to menstrate. Its around 17-22%. So I came to this article to find out more about that.....but to no avail.
So, do you think it'd be possible to mention the required body to fat menstrate? A little more info or something? 75.72.219.104 ( talk) 00:12, 23 February 2010 (UTC)
i have been menstruating for more than 16 days, and for the past 10 days my menstruation was light, smelly and sometimes brownish, is it normal? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 41.241.130.118 ( talk) 10:17, 15 March 2010 (UTC)
Is there a time in the period cycle where a females sex drive is at its peak? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Dlgjslover ( talk • contribs) 05:30, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
Some mention should be made as to how Toxic Shock Syndrome is related to tampon use (especially linked to non-absorbent tampons). ( Sugarless ( talk) 17:12, 27 April 2010 (UTC))
m 21 years old.m getting bleeding during perods only for couple a days.n also from last 2 months my date of periods r getting late by 2 days? watz problem? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 202.133.59.116 ( talk) 07:27, 4 July 2010 (UTC)
what are the symptoms before getting menstrual cyle in the age of 25 . Means i have got irregular periods so i wanted to know the symptons because i sometimes suffer from hormonal changes —Preceding unsigned comment added by 117.192.213.225 ( talk) 16:33, 1 August 2010 (UTC)
I moved the following text, and its references to here: repeated studies have consistently shown the mean and median of sample menstrual cycle data to be around 29.5 days. [1] [2] [3] The references are:
The thing is, I found none of these articles to be able to tell anything more than Chiazze 1968 [6]. The 1937 study seems too old, and the sample size in Cutler 1979 is only one tenth of that in Chiazze. I couldn't get access to Treloar 1967, however, so it would be appreciated if anyone with access had a look at it just in case. Mikael Häggström ( talk) 08:21, 9 January 2011 (UTC)
I seem to vaguely remember some books saying that testosterone levels will vary throughout the menstrual cycle along with estrogen levels (off hand, memory tells me they follow the same path - although not the same levels).
I could not find a reliable source for this, but if anyone finds this it would be useful to mention. If the levels fluctuate enough it might be worth including on some of the graphs shown as well. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.159.238.97 ( talk) 03:19, 18 March 2011 (UTC)
steps should be taken while menstrual flow ? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 27.97.162.99 ( talk) 17:12, 15 July 2011 (UTC)
I was doing some studying about the 'menstrual cycle' and found this in Guyton's Textbook of Medical Physiology (chapter 81):
"The normal reproductive years of the female are characterized by monthly rhythmical changes in the rates of secretion of the female hormones and corresponding physical changes in the ovaries and other sexual organs. This rhythmical pattern is called the female monthly sexual cycle (or, less accurately, the menstrual cycle)."
So I'd like to request a name change for this page to sexual cycle, since that would be scientifically correct. Zaheer12a ( talk) 21:51, 29 January 2012 (UTC)
At the bottom of the Menstrual_cycle#Length section there are statements supporting a Lunar effect on menstrual cycles:
A 1979 study of 305 women found that approximately one-third of the subjects had lunar period cycles in length, i.e., a mean cycle length of 29.5 days plus or minus 1 day. Almost two-thirds of the subjects started their cycle in the brighter half of the lunar cycle, significantly more than would be expected by random distribution. [1] Another study found a statistically significant number of menstruations occurred around the new moon. [2] |
However, in the "Nightlighting and the moon" section it says:
A meta-analysis of studies from 1996 showed no correlation between the human menstrual cycle and the lunar cycle. [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] Dogon villagers did not have electric lighting and spent most nights outdoors, talking and sleeping; so they were an ideal population for detecting a lunar influence; none, however, was found. [9] |
I think the latter has more evidence, since it is a meta-analysis that was done more recently, and therefore I suggest that the text in the former box should be removed from the article. Mikael Häggström ( talk) 16:50, 15 March 2013 (UTC)
OK, ref #1 Straight Dope is out because they claimed incorrectly that a normal period is 28d.
The pubmed studies say:
ref#2:
Abstract
In a selected population of 312 women, prospective menses records were maintained during the autumn of 1977. Women whose menstrual cycle duration approaches the cycle duration of the earth's moon (29.5 days) tend to ovulate in the dark phase of the lunar period. The dark phase encompasses the half-cycle of the month from last quarter, through new moon, to first quarter. Women showing irregular menses also tended to ovulate during the dark phase of the lunar period. PIP:
The possibility of a lunar effect on the menstrual cycle was investigated in 312 university students who kept records of their menstrual cycles. These records were studied for 14 weeks in a double-blind, prospective manner. Of the 312 women, 68 experienced lunar period cycles (29.5 days). Of these 68, 47 menstruated in the light half of the month; therefore, ovulation tended to occur in the dark phase of the lunar period which is defined as the half-cycle of the month from the last quarter, through new moon, to first quarter. Even women with irregular menses (defined for this study as appreciably varied from the 29.5-day lunar cycle) also tended to ovulate during the dark phase of the lunar period. One possible explanation is that a natural rhythm of electromagnetic radiation has its origin in the lunar cycle and may be reflected in phase-locking of the human menstrual cycle.
ref #3
PIP:
A double-blind, prospective study during the fall of 1979 investigated the association between the menstrual cycles of 305 Brooklyn College undergraduates and their associates and the lunar cycles. All subjects were 19-35 years old and using neither OCs (oral contraceptives) nor the IUD. Approximately 1/3 of the subjects had lunar period cycles, i.e., a mean cycle length of 29.5 +/- l day. Almost 2/3 of the subjects started their October cycle in the light 1/2 of the lunar cycle, significantly more than would be expected by random distribution. The author concludes that there is a lunar influence on ovulation.
ref #4
PIP:
A synchronous relationship between the menstrual cycle and lunar rhythm was confirmed by investigative data, laboratory findings, and clinical experience. Among the 826 female volunteers with a normal menstrual cycle (ages 16-25), a large proportion of menstruations occurred around the new moon (28.3%), while at other times during the lunar month, the proportion of menstruations occurring ranged between 8.5-12.6%; the difference was significant (P0.01). The 6-hydroxymelatonin levels in the urina sanguinis of 3 female volunteers reached their zenith prior to and during menstruation, gradually declining to their nadir during ovulation. The difference in 6-hydroxymelatonin between menstruation and ovulation was significant (P0.01). 2 of these 3 volunteers had their zenith in the period of the new moon and nadir 3-4 days prior to the full moon respectively. The lunar-menses-regulatory therapy in treatment of Nephropenic secondary amenorrhea revealed 4 clinical cures, 5 marked effects, 8 menogogue, and 3 ineffective out of 20 cases. (1986)
ref #5
Abstract
Human and animal physiology are subject to seasonal, lunar, and circadian rhythms. Although the seasonal and circadian rhythms have been fairly well described, little is known about the effects of the lunar cycle on the behavior and physiology of humans and animals. The lunar cycle has an impact on human reproduction, in particular fertility, menstruation, and birth rate. Melatonin levels appear to correlate with the menstrual cycle. Admittance to hospitals and emergency units because of various causes (cardiovascular and acute coronary events, variceal hemorrhage, diarrhea, urinary retention) correlated with moon phases. In addition, other events associated with human behavior, such as traffic accidents, crimes, and suicides, appeared to be influenced by the lunar cycle. However, a number of reports find no correlation between the lunar cycle and human reproduction and admittance to clinics and emergency units. Animal studies revealed that the lunar cycle may affect hormonal changes early in phylogenesis (insects). In fish the lunar clock influences reproduction and involves the hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadal axis. In birds, the daily variations in melatonin and corticosterone disappear during full-moon days. The lunar cycle also exerts effects on laboratory rats with regard to taste sensitivity and the ultrastructure of pineal gland cells. Cyclic variations related to the moon's phases in the magnitude of the humoral immune response of mice to polivinylpyrrolidone and sheep erythrocytes were also described. It is suggested that melatonin and endogenous steroids may mediate the described cyclic alterations of physiological processes. The release of neurohormones may be triggered by the electromagnetic radiation and/or the gravitational pull of the moon. Although the exact mechanism of the moon's influence on humans and animals awaits further exploration, knowledge of this kind of biorhythm may be helpful in police surveillance, medical practice, and investigations involving laboratory animals.
And source #6 does not agree: "The Moon Was Full and Nothing Happened" [7]
I'm going to go with the PubMed articles rather than one that, like Straight Dope, has the 28d problem and goes on to say The light of the moon is a very minor source of light in most women's lives, and is no more likely than the moon's gravitational force to have a significant effect on a woman's ovulation. Furthermore, the average menstrual cycle is 28 days but varies from woman to woman and month to month, while the length of the lunar month is a consistent 29.53 days.' It seems that these authors are not even aware that even clams feel the moon effect when put in a box that does not allow "the light of the moon". Gandydancer ( talk) 17:48, 16 March 2013 (UTC)
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