Ta. Jaatinen et al., HORMONAL RESPONSES TO PHYSICAL EXERCISE IN PATIENTS WITH POLYCYSTIC OVARIAN SYNDROME, Fertility and sterility, 60(2), 1993, pp. 262-267
Objective: To examine the effects of obesity and polycystic ovarian sy
ndrome (PCOS) on the endocrine responses to physical exercise. Setting
: Outpatient clinic of reproductive endocrinology at the University Ce
ntral Hospital of Turku and the Department of Pharmacology, University
of Turku, Turku, Finland. Patients: Nine oligomenorrheic women with P
COS (body mass index BMI! 19.5 to 46.0 kg/m2) and eight control women
with regular menstrual cycles (BMI 20.0 to 53.5 kg/m2). Interventions
: A bicycle ergometer test was performed at 8 A.M. Results: The only h
ormone response that was different between PCOS patients and controls
was the exercise-induced increase in circulating GH levels. This respo
nse was significantly greater in controls than in PCOS patients. There
was also a negative correlation between the GH response and BMI. The
increases in the concentrations of adrenaline, noradrenaline, 3,4-dihy
droxyphenyl-glycol, glucose, and insulin: C-peptide ratios during the
bicycle ergometer test were correlated negatively to BMI. Conclusion:
Obesity is an important determinant of the hormonal responses to physi
cal exercise. This applies also to women with PCOS. Taking obesity int
o account in the analysis of exercise-induced hormone responses, only
little, if any, of the variation in the hormonal responses measured by
us could be attributed to PCOS per se. The only hormone response that
was different between PCOS patients and controls was the GH response.