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Which came first - the chicken or the egg? Physiology of Reproduction Jennifer McDonald DO
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Hypothalamic Pituitary Axis Neural controlChemical control Dopamine (-) Norepiniphrine (+) Endorphins (-) Hypothalamus Gn-RH Ant. pituitary FSH, LH Ovaries Uterus Progesterone Estrogen Menses –± ?
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Sequence of Maturation
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Telarche = breast development Estrogen dominant
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Tanner Staging - Breast Development PrepubertalBreast bud with areola widening
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Enlargement of breast. No separation of contours Secondary mound with separation of contours Mature breast
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Adrenarche = pubic hair growth Adrenal androgen dominant DHEA DHEAS
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Tanner Staging - Hair Growth No hairStraight along labia Increased quantity, female triangle
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More dense, curled, adult distribution Medial aspect of thighs
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Timing is Everything
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Menarche = onset of menses Average 2 to 2.5 years after breast development Average American girls 12.7 years +/- 1 year Earlier in African American and Hispanic girls Usually delayed until critical mass ~105 pounds or body fat content of 22%
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Delayed Puberty No pubertal development by age 13 Pubertal maturation not completed within 4 years or Menses not begun by age 16
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Precocious Puberty Breast or pubic hair development before 7 years (Caucasians) or younger than 6 years (African Americans) Most common cause = idiopathic
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Menarche Requirements: o GnRH from the hypothalamus o FSH and LH from the pituitary o Estrogen and progesterone from the ovaries o Normal outflow tract
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Who’s Doing What Ovary Follicular Phase Ovulation Luteal Phase Uterus Proliferative Phase Secretory Phase
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Mature Ovary Non-growing = primordial follicles Growing follicles Primordial follicles are arrested in which stage of meiosis?
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15 to 20 weeks gestation as many as 7 million germs cells in each ovary Newborn = 2 million primary oocytes Puberty = 300,000 primary oocytes remain 400 will become secondary oocytes and ovulate during reproductive years Numbers Game
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GnRH Gonadotropin releasing hormone Comes from ?? Stimulates ?? What is unique about its release ??
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Follicle Stimulating Hormone (FSH) Comes from ?? Release stimulated by ?? Stimulates growth and maturation of follicles Stimulates estrogen production in granulosa cells Inhibited by estrogen and progesterone
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Theca interna - androstenedione in response to LH Granulosa cells - convert androstenedione to estradiol when stimulated by FSH
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Luetenizing Hormone (LH) Comes from ?? Release stimulated by ?? Also stimulated by high levels of estrogen Inhibited by estrogen & progesterone together Triggers ovulation Maintains the corpus luteum LH surge initiates continuation of meiosis
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Ovulation occurs approximately 10-12 hours after the LH surge and 24-36 hours after peak estradiol levels attained
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Corpus Luteum (“yellow body”) Theca interna & granulosa cells Directed by LH Synthesizes estrogen and significant amounts of progesterone (40 mg/day) Progesterone causes secretory endometrium in preparation for implantation
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Indicators of Ovulation Prospective or retrospective? Basal body temperature Urinary LH Serum progesterone Ovum lives approximately 24 hours after it is released but is fertilizable less than half that time
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Uterine Cycle
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Proliferative Phase Estrogen dominates Parallels follicular phase of the ovary Growth of blood vessels, mucosa and glands Secretory Phase Progesterone dominant Parallels luteal phase Mucous producing
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Normal Menstruation Predominantly arterial Usual duration 3-5 days 1 to 8 days still normal Average flow 30 mL More than 80 mL abnormal
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Cervical Changes Estrogen - thins Progesterone - thickens Spinnbarkeit Fern Patterns
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Breast Changes Estrogen - proliferation of ducts Progesterone - growth of lobules & alveoli Mastalgia = cyclic breast pain
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Estrogens Estrone (E1) 17 -estradiol (E2) Estriol (E3) Which organs/cells are responsible for production of estrogen? Granulosa cells, theca cells, corpus luteum, and the placenta
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Estrogens 17 -estradiol is the major secreted estrogen Estradiol is the most potent Estriol is the least potent 2% of circulating estradiol is free
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Progesterone Secreted in large amounts by the corpus luteum and the placenta 2% free in circulation Important intermediate in steroid biosynthesis pathway Fluctuate widely during cycle What does progesterone do?
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Testosterone Secreted by ovaries, adrenal cortex (small) and peripheral conversion androstendedione (half) Follow Circadian rhythms What time of day is testosterone its highest?
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