Low energy availability, not stress of exercise, alters LH pulsatility in exercising women

被引:328
|
作者
Loucks, AB [1 ]
Verdun, M
Heath, EM
机构
[1] Ohio Univ, Dept Sci Biol, Athens, OH 45701 USA
[2] Ohio Univ, Coll Osteopath Med, Athens, OH 45701 USA
关键词
athletic amenorrhea; nutrition; reproduction; metabolic hormones; luteinizing hormone;
D O I
10.1152/jappl.1998.84.1.37
中图分类号
Q4 [生理学];
学科分类号
071003 ;
摘要
We tested two hypotheses about the disruption of luteinizing hormone (LH) pulsatility in exercising women by assaying LM in blood samples drawn at 10-min intervals over 24 h from nine young, habitually sedentary, regularly menstruating women on days 8, 9, or 10 of two menstrual cycles after 4 days of intense exercise [E = 30 kcal.kg lean body mass (LBM)(-1).day(-1) at 70% of aerobic capacity]. To test the hypothesis that LH pulsatility is disrupted by low energy availability, we controlled the subjects' dietary energy intakes (I) to set their energy availabilities (A = I - E) at 45 and 10 kcal.kg LBM-1.day(-1) during the two trials. To test the hypothesis that LH pulsatility is disrupted by the stress of exercise, we compared the resulting LH pulsatilities to those previously reported in women with similar controlled energy availability who had not exercised. In the exercising women, low energy availability reduced LH pulse frequency by 10% (P < 0.01) during the waking hours and increased LH pulse amplitude by 36% (P = 0.05) during waking and sleeping hours, but this reduction in LH pulse frequency was blunted by 60% (P = 0.03) compared with that in the previously studied nonexercising women whose low energy availability was caused by dietary restriction. The stress of exercise neither reduced LH pulse frequency nor increased LH pulse amplitude (all P > 0.4). During exercise, the proportion of energy derived from carbohydrate oxidation was reduced from 73% while A = 45 kcal.kg LBM-1.day(-1) to 49% while A = 10 kcal.kg LBM-1.day(-1) (P < 0.0001). These results contradict the hypothesis that LH pulsatility is disrupted by exercise stress and suggest that LH pulsatility in women depends on energy availability.
引用
收藏
页码:37 / 46
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Low Energy Availability in Exercising Women: Historical Perspectives and Future Directions
    Joanne Slater
    Rachel Brown
    Rebecca McLay-Cooke
    Katherine Black
    Sports Medicine, 2017, 47 : 207 - 220
  • [2] Low Energy Availability in Exercising Women: Historical Perspectives and Future Directions
    Slater, Joanne
    Brown, Rachel
    McLay-Cooke, Rebecca
    Black, Katherine
    SPORTS MEDICINE, 2017, 47 (02) : 207 - 220
  • [3] Low Energy Availability Alters Metabolome With And Without Daily Exercise
    Murphy, Chaise
    Nusser, Valentin
    Wasserfurth, Paulina
    Koehler, Karsten
    MEDICINE & SCIENCE IN SPORTS & EXERCISE, 2024, 56 (10) : 366 - 366
  • [4] Low energy availability, not exercise stress, suppresses the diurnal rhythm of leptin in healthy young women
    Hilton, LK
    Loucks, AB
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-ENDOCRINOLOGY AND METABOLISM, 2000, 278 (01): : E43 - E49
  • [5] Low Carbohydrate Availability, Not Energy Availability, Alters The Immune Response To Exercise In Elite Race-walkers
    McKay, Alannah K. A.
    Peeling, Peter
    Pyne, David B.
    Tee, Nicolin
    Heikura, Ida A.
    Burke, Louise M.
    MEDICINE & SCIENCE IN SPORTS & EXERCISE, 2020, 52 (07) : 847 - 847
  • [6] INDUCTION OF LOW-T-3 SYNDROME IN EXERCISING WOMEN OCCURS AT A THRESHOLD OF ENERGY AVAILABILITY
    LOUCKS, AB
    HEATH, EM
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, 1994, 266 (03): : R817 - R823
  • [7] Energy availability discriminates clinical menstrual status in exercising women
    Reed, Jennifer L.
    De Souza, Mary Jane
    Mallinson, Rebecca J.
    Scheid, Jennifer L.
    Williams, Nancy I.
    JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY OF SPORTS NUTRITION, 2015, 12
  • [8] Metabolic and Behavioral Correlates of Low Energy Availability in Exercising Men
    Petersen, Jay
    MEDICINE AND SCIENCE IN SPORTS AND EXERCISE, 2017, 49 (05): : 13 - 13
  • [9] A Nutritional Intervention In Exercising Women With Oligo/Amenorrhea Improved Energy Availability
    Koltun, Kristen J.
    Mallinson, Rebecca
    Williams, Nancy I.
    De Souza, Mary Jane
    MEDICINE & SCIENCE IN SPORTS & EXERCISE, 2020, 52 (07) : 602 - 602
  • [10] Luteinizing hormone pulsatility is disrupted at a threshold of energy availability in regularly menstruating women
    Loucks, AB
    Thuma, JR
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM, 2003, 88 (01): : 297 - 311