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Impact of sleep patterns upon female neuroendocrinology and reproductive outcomes: a comprehensive review

Journal

REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY AND ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12958-022-00889-3

Keywords

Sleep; Sleep disturbance; Circadian rhythm; Reproduction; Reproductive hormones; Fertility; Infertility; Neuroendocrinology

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Sleep patterns have a significant impact on women's reproductive function and clinical outcomes. Pathologic sleep patterns are closely linked to menstrual irregularity, infertility, and early pregnancy loss. Women who engage in shift work or experience sleep disruption or short sleep duration also have lower success rates with assisted reproductive technology. Sleep duration, quality, disordered breathing, and shift work are also associated with harmful conditions in pregnancy.
Sleep is vital to human bodily function. Growing evidence indicates that sleep deprivation, disruption, dysrhythmia, and disorders are associated with impaired reproductive function and poor clinical outcomes in women. These associations are largely mediated by molecular-genetic and hormonal pathways, which are crucial for the complex and time sensitive processes of hormone synthesis/secretion, folliculogenesis, ovulation, fertilization, implantation, and menstruation. Pathologic sleep patterns are closely linked to menstrual irregularity, polycystic ovarian syndrome, premature ovarian insufficiency, sub/infertility, and early pregnancy loss. Measures of success with assisted reproductive technology are also lower among women who engage in shift work, or experience sleep disruption or short sleep duration. Extremes of sleep duration, poor sleep quality, sleep disordered breathing, and shift work are also associated with several harmful conditions in pregnancy, including gestational diabetes and hypertensive disorders. While accumulating evidence implicates pathologic sleep patterns in impaired reproductive function and poor reproductive outcomes, additional research is needed to determine causality and propose therapeutic interventions.

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