Ultradian Rhythms in Heart Rate Variability and Distal Body TemperatureAnticipate the Luteinizing Hormone Surge Onset

Published: July 17, 2020, 8:17 p.m.

Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.07.15.205450v1?rss=1 Authors: Grant, A. D., Newman, M., Kriegsfeld, L. J. Abstract: The human menstrual cycle is characterized by predictable patterns of physiological change across timescales, yet non-invasive anticipation of key events is not yet possible at individual resolution. Although patterns of reproductive hormones across the menstrual cycle have been well characterized, monitoring these measures repeatedly to anticipate the preovulatory luteinizing hormone (LH) surge is not practical for fertility awareness. In the present study, we explored whether non-invasive and high frequency measures of distal body temperature (DBT), sleeping heart rate (HR), sleeping heart rate variability (HRV), and sleep timing could be used to anticipate the preovulatory LH surge in women. To test this possibility, we used signal processing to examine these measures across the menstrual cycle. Cycles were examined from both pre- (n=45 cycles) and perimenopausal (n=10 cycles) women using days of supra-surge threshold LH and dates of menstruation for all cycles. For a subset of cycles, urinary estradiol and progesterone metabolites were measured daily around the time of the LH surge. Wavelet analysis revealed a consistent inflection point of ultradian rhythm (2-5 h) power of DBT and HRV that enabled anticipation of the LH surge at least 2 days prior to its onset in 100% of individuals. In contrast, the power of ultradian rhythms in heart rate, circadian rhythms in body temperature, and metrics of sleep duration and sleep timing were not predictive of the LH surge. Together, the present findings reveal fluctuations in distal body temperature and heart rate variability that consistently anticipate the LH surge and may aid in fertility awareness. Key PointsO_LIUltradian (2-5 h) rhythm power of distal body temperature and heart rate variability (RMSSD) exhibits a stereotyped inflection point and peak in the days leading up to the LH surge in premenopausal women. C_LIO_LICircadian rhythms of distal body temperature and single time-point/day metrics do not permit anticipation of the LH surge. C_LIO_LIMeasurement of continuous metabolic and autonomic outputs, enabling assessment of ultradian rhythms, may be of value to the fertility awareness method. C_LI Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info