Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Reproduction and environment
- 2 Genetic damage and male reproduction
- 3 The microenvironment in health and cancer of the mammary gland
- 4 The energetic cost of physical activity and the regulation of reproduction
- 5 Energetic cost of gestation and lactation in humans
- 6 Adaptive maternal, placental and fetal responses to nutritional extremes in the pregnant adolescent: lessons from sheep
- 7 Growth and sexual maturation in human and non-human primates: a brief review
- 8 The evolution of post-reproductive life: adaptationist scenarios
- 9 Analysing the characteristics of the menstrual cycle in field situations in humans: some methodological aspects
- 10 An insidious burden of disease: the pathological role of sexually transmitted diseases in fertility
- 11 Family planning and unsafe abortion
- 12 Global sexual and reproductive health: responding to the needs of adolescents
- 13 Understanding reproductive decisions
- Index
- References
4 - The energetic cost of physical activity and the regulation of reproduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 May 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Reproduction and environment
- 2 Genetic damage and male reproduction
- 3 The microenvironment in health and cancer of the mammary gland
- 4 The energetic cost of physical activity and the regulation of reproduction
- 5 Energetic cost of gestation and lactation in humans
- 6 Adaptive maternal, placental and fetal responses to nutritional extremes in the pregnant adolescent: lessons from sheep
- 7 Growth and sexual maturation in human and non-human primates: a brief review
- 8 The evolution of post-reproductive life: adaptationist scenarios
- 9 Analysing the characteristics of the menstrual cycle in field situations in humans: some methodological aspects
- 10 An insidious burden of disease: the pathological role of sexually transmitted diseases in fertility
- 11 Family planning and unsafe abortion
- 12 Global sexual and reproductive health: responding to the needs of adolescents
- 13 Understanding reproductive decisions
- Index
- References
Summary
Introduction
The association of physical activity with the suppression of reproductive function in women has been recognized for a number of years. The relationship seems clearest in the association of strenuous exercise and amenorrhea (the absence of menstrual cycling owing to complete ovarian suppression). However, we now recognize that exercise in recreational, as well as competitive athletes, is associated with reproductive dysfunction along a continuum, ranging from normal ovulatory cycles to subtle luteal phase defects (LPD), anovulatory cycles, and finally to amenorrhea (De Souza, 2003; Prior & Vigna, 1985). The most common menstrual cycle anomaly associated with exercise is LPD (De Souza et al., 1998), although amenorrhea is the most dramatic and best known.
There is a growing consensus that the primary cause of these menstrual cycle abnormalities is a deficit of dietary energy intake (EI) (Loucks, 2005), which can lead to a temporary state of negative energy balance, the most obvious consequence of which is the loss of body weight, as tissues (both protein and fat) are catabolised for fuel. Less obvious consequences are the decreases in metabolic rate per kg FFM (fat-free mass, i.e. muscle and organs), the differential loss of tissues with different metabolic rates, and the accompanying reduction in core temperature (Elia, 1997). Behavioural changes also occur, such as reductions in the duration and intensity of physical activities and the adoption of more resting postures (Keys, 1950).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Reproduction and AdaptationTopics in Human Reproductive Ecology, pp. 80 - 97Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011
References
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