Variations in strength-related measures during the menstrual cycle in eumenorrheic women: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Published
May 28, 2020
Journal
Journal of science and medicine in sport
PICOID
7d0d584f
DOI
Citations
49
Keywords
Athletes, Menstruation, Oestrogen, Period, Power, Progesterone
Copyright
Copyright © 2020 Sports Medicine Australia. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Patients/Population/Participants

eumenorrheic women

Intervention

literature search, methodological rigour assessment, random effects meta-analyses

Comparison

early-follicular phase, ovulatory phase, mid-luteal phase

Outcome

maximal voluntary contraction, isokinetic peak torque, explosive strength

Abstract

P
I
C
O

To systematically review the current body of research that has investigated changes in strength-related variables during different phases of the menstrual cycle in eumenorrheic women. Systematic review and meta-analysis. A literature search was conducted in Pubmed, SPORTDiscus and Web of Science using search terms related to the menstrual cycle and strength-related measures. Two reviewers reached consensus that 21 studies met the criteria for inclusion. Methodological rigour was assessed using the Quality Assessment Tool for Observational Cohort and Cross-Sectional Studies. Random effects meta-analyses were used to compare the early-follicular, ovulatory and mid-luteal phases for maximal voluntary contraction, isokinetic peak torque, and explosive strength. The assessment of study quality showed that a high level of bias exists in specific areas of study design. Non-significant and small or trivial effect sizes (p≥0.26, Hedges g≤0.35) were identified for all strength-related variables in each comparison between phases. 95% confidence intervals for each comparison suggested the uncertainty associated with each estimate extends to a small effect on strength performance with unclear direction (-0.42≤g≤0.48). The heterogeneity for each comparison was also small (p≥0.83, I Strength-related measures appear to be minimally altered (g≤0.35) by the fluctuations in ovarian sex hormones that occur during the menstrual cycle. This finding should be interpreted with caution due to the methodological shortcomings identified by the quality assessment.

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