4.2 Article

Steroid stress hormone changes throughout the menstrual cycle: A rise in evening aldosterone concentration in early luteal phase precedes the symptoms of premenstrual syndrome

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jne.13043

Keywords

glucocorticoids; menstrual cycle; mineralocorticoids

Funding

  1. Agentura Ministerstva skolstva, vedy, vyskumu a sportu SR [VEGA 2/0022/19]
  2. Agentura na Podporu Vyskumu a Vyvoja [APVV-18-0283]

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The study found that in the early luteal phase of the menstrual cycle, salivary aldosterone concentrations were significantly higher in women with PMS compared to controls, while cortisol concentrations remained unchanged. This suggests that evening aldosterone levels may play an important role in the development of PMS symptoms.
There is still a lack of consistent evidence on dysregulation of steroid stress hormones cortisol and aldosterone in premenstrual syndrome (PMS). We aimed to test the hypothesis that, in healthy women, salivary aldosterone concentrations are higher in those with PMS compared to controls, particularly during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle. In total, 99 female subjects (49 women with and 50 women without PMS) participated in a prospective non-interventional case-control study. Saliva sampling was performed in the follicular (day 8), early luteal (day 20) and late luteal phase (2 days before expected onset of bleeding) of the menstrual cycle in the morning and the evening. The results confirmed the hypothesis that salivary aldosterone concentrations are higher in women with PMS during the early luteal phase compared to controls (p < .01) in the evening. Early luteal phase aldosterone concentrations positively correlated with the frequency of premenstrual symptoms. Women with PMS exhibited a flatter morning to evening aldosterone slope compared to controls (p < .05). Morning and evening salivary cortisol concentrations were unchanged throughout the menstrual cycle in both groups of women. In conclusion, evening salivary aldosterone, but not cortisol concentrations, are increased in women with PMS during the early luteal phase compared to controls. Cortisol does not appear to be involved in the mechanisms contributing to the course of PMS. High evening salivary aldosterone in the early luteal phase may represent an important risk factor and could be of predictive value for the occurrence of premenstrual symptoms.

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