La. Stephenson et Ma. Kolka, Esophageal temperature threshold for sweating decreases before ovulation in premenopausal women, J APP PHYSL, 86(1), 1999, pp. 22-28
The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that regulated body te
mperature is decreased in the preovulatory phase in eumenorrheic women. Six
women were studied in both the preovulatory phase (Preov-2; days 9-12), wh
ich was 1-2 days before predicted ovulation when 17 beta-estradiol (E-2) wa
s estimated to peak, and in the follicular phase (F; days 2-6). The subject
s walked on a treadmill (similar to 225 W . m(-2)) in a warm chamber (ambie
nt temperature = 30 degrees C; dew-point temperature = 11.5 degrees C) whil
e heavily clothed. E-2, esophageal temperature (T-es), local skin temperatu
res, and local sweating rate were measured. The estimate of when the E-2 su
rge would occur was correct for four of six subjects. In these four subject
s, E-2 increased (P less than or equal to 0.05) from 42.0 +/- 24.5 pg/ml du
ring F to 123.2 +/- 31.3 pg/ml during Preov-2. Resting T-es was 37.02 +/- 0
.20 degrees C during F and 36.76 +/- 0.28 degrees C during Preov-2 (P less
than or equal to 0.05). The T-es threshold for sweating was decreased (P le
ss than or equal to 0.05) from 36.88 +/- 0.27 degrees C during F to 36.64 /- 0.35 degrees C during Preov-2. Both mean skin and mean body temperatures
were decreased during rest in Preov-2 group. The hypothesis that regulated
body temperature is decreased during the preovulatory phase is supported.