Menstrual Cycle and Athletic Status Interact to Influence Symptoms, Mood, and Cognition in Females.

IF 5.9 2区 医学 Q1 SPORT SCIENCES
Flaminia Ronca, Evelyn Watson, Isabel Metcalf, Benjamin Tari
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Abstract

Background: There is growing interest in understanding if, and how, the menstrual cycle may affect physical and cognitive performance, particularly in the context of sport and physical activity. While hormonal fluctuations are often assumed to impact cognition, especially during menstruation, empirical evidence remains inconclusive. This study aimed to investigate whether cognitive performance, mood, and symptomology vary across menstrual cycle phases and whether these effects are influenced by athletic participation level.

Results: Fifty-four females (18-40 years) categorised by athletic participation level (i.e., inactive, active, competing, elite) took part. At each key menstrual phase (menstruation / early follicular, late follicular, ovulation and mid-luteal), they completed a cognitive battery (attention, inhibition and spatial anticipation), and reported their mood and symptoms. Faster reaction times and fewer errors were committed during ovulation (p < .01), suggesting better overall performance. In contrast, reaction times were slower during the luteal phase (p < .01), but more errors were committed in the follicular phase (p = .01). Importantly, participants' athletic level had a stronger effect on cognitive performance than phase, where inactive participants scored worse across tasks than their more active counterparts, and elite participants exhibited more significant fluctuations in cognition across phases. Mood and symptoms were worse during menstruation regardless of athletic level. However, while mood varied across phases it did not correlate with cognitive performance. Of note, participants perceived that their symptoms negatively impacted their cognitive performance during menstruation, but there was no evidence of any objective detriment to cognitive performance during this phase neither on reaction times nor errors on any task.

Conclusion: These findings suggest the existence of mild cognitive fluctuations throughout the menstrual cycle, albeit with high individual variability, and which are incongruent with symptomology. Opposing results between perceived and measured performance challenge common assumptions about menstruation-related performance, and highlight the importance of addressing societal biases in female sport and health. The stronger effects of athletic engagement on cognitive performance, rather than phase, reinforce the cognitive benefits of an active lifestyle.

Key points: This study aimed to investigate cognitive fluctuations in eumenorrheic females recruited from a range of activity levels. We demonstrate mild cognitive fluctuations throughout the menstrual cycle, which are incongruent with symptomology. And reinforce the importance of physical activity for supporting cognitive performance.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

月经周期和运动状态相互作用影响女性的症状、情绪和认知。
背景:人们越来越关注月经周期是否以及如何影响身体和认知表现,特别是在运动和体力活动的背景下。虽然通常认为荷尔蒙波动会影响认知,特别是在月经期间,但经验证据仍然没有定论。本研究旨在探讨认知表现、情绪和症状在月经周期阶段是否存在差异,以及这些影响是否受到运动参与水平的影响。结果:54名女性(18-40岁)按运动参与水平(非运动、运动、竞技、精英)进行了调查。在每个关键月经期(月经/卵泡早期、卵泡晚期、排卵期和黄体中期),她们完成认知电池(注意力、抑制和空间预期),并报告她们的情绪和症状。结论:这些发现表明在整个月经周期中存在轻微的认知波动,尽管个体差异很大,但与症状不一致。感知表现和测量表现之间的相反结果挑战了关于月经相关表现的普遍假设,并强调了解决女性运动和健康方面的社会偏见的重要性。运动对认知能力的影响更大,而不是阶段,强化了积极生活方式对认知的好处。重点:本研究旨在调查从一系列活动水平中招募的痛经女性的认知波动。我们证明轻微的认知波动在整个月经周期,这是不一致的症状。并强调体育活动对支持认知表现的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Sports Medicine - Open
Sports Medicine - Open SPORT SCIENCES-
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
4.30%
发文量
142
审稿时长
13 weeks
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