Physiological variability of fluid-regulation hormones in young women

Author:

Stachenfeld Nina S.1,DiPietro Loretta1,Kokoszka Cheryl A.1,Silva Celso2,Keefe David L.2,Nadel Ethan R.134

Affiliation:

1. The John B. Pierce Laboratory, Departments of

2. Women and Infants Hospital, Brown University School of Medicine, Providence, Rhode Island 02905

3. Epidemiology and Public Health, and

4. Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06519; and

Abstract

We tested the physiological reliability of plasma renin activity (PRA) and plasma concentrations of arginine vasopressin (P[AVP]), aldosterone (P[ALD]), and atrial natriuretic peptide (P[ANP]) in the early follicular phase and midluteal phases over the course of two menstrual cycles ( n = 9 women, ages 25 ± 1 yr). The reliability (Cronbach’s α ≥0.80) of these hormones within a given phase of the cycle was tested 1) at rest, 2) after 2.5 h of dehydrating exercise, and 3) during a rehydration period. The mean hormone concentrations were similar within both the early follicular and midluteal phase tests; and the mean concentrations of P[ALD] and PRA for the three test conditions were significantly greater during the midluteal compared with the early follicular phase. Although Cronbach’s α for resting and recovery P[ANP] were high (0.80 and 0.87, respectively), the resting and rehydration values for P[AVP], P[ALD], and PRA were variable between trials for the follicular (α from 0.49 to 0.55) and the luteal phase (α from 0.25 to 0.66). Physiological reliability was better after dehydration for P[AVP] and PRA but remained low for P[ALD]. Although resting and recovery P[AVP], P[ALD], and PRA were not consistent within a given menstrual phase, the differences in the concentrations of these hormones between the different menstrual phases far exceeded the variability within the phases, indicating that the low within-phase reliability does not prevent the detection of menstrual phase-related differences in these hormonal variables.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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