Abstract
In a search for possible hormonal reasons for the loss of protection from myocardial infarction seen in diabetic women, serum levels of estradiol, progesterone, and luteinizing hormone were compared throughout a menstrual cycle (17 points) in eight healthy nonsmoking women and five otherwise healthy nonsmoking insulin-dependent diabetic women. The total length of the menstrual cycle and the lengths of the follicular and luteal phases did not differ between the groups. During the periovulatory and lineal phases, there was no significant intergroup difference with respect to any of the three hormones. During the follicular phase, in both groups, there was a plateau in serum progesterone concentration, with the level approximately 42% lower in the diabetic group (12.0 ± 6.6 ng/dl versus 20.7 ± 5.7; P < 0.0001). Follicular-phase serum estradiol showed a rising curve in both groups; day-by-day comparison (days −10 to −3 before the luteinizing hormone peak) showed consistently higher levels in the diabetic group (mean, 108 pg/ml versus 95 pg/ml; P < 0.001). The follicular-phase serum estradiol to progesterone ratio was nearly twice as high in the diabetic group as in the normal group (8.9 versus 4,6), a difference that was highly significant. The finding of elevated serum estradiol and subnormal serum progesterone concentrations during the follicular phase is so far unique to women with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. The possibility that this pronounced abnormality in diabetic women may be related to coronary disease merits testing in suitable in vivo and in vitro models of atherogenesis. (Steroids 55:560–564, 1990)
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