Puberty and the Menstrual Cycle

Cards (10)

  • The menstrual cycle
    the monthly release of an egg from a woman's ovaries
  • At puberty, your body starts releasing sex hormones that trigger off secondary sexual characteristics, and cause eggs to mature in women
  • In men the main reproductive hormone is testosterone, which is produced by the testes and stimulates sperm production
  • In women the main reproductive hormone is oestrogen, which is produced by the ovaries and is involved in bringing about physical changes and the menstrual cycle
  • The menstrual cycle - stages:
    1. day 1, menstruation starts, the uterus lining breaks down for about 4 days
    2. the uterus lining builds up again, from day 4 to 14, into a thick, spongy layer full of blood vessels, ready to receive a fertilised egg
    3. an egg develops and is released from the ovary at day 14 - this is called ovulation
    4. the wall is maintained for about 14 days until day 28. If no fertilised egg has landed on the uterus wall by day 28, the spongy lining starts to break down and the whole cycle starts again
  • The menstrual cycle is controlled by 4 hormones:
    • FSH (follicle-stimulating hormone)
    • Oestrogen
    • LH (luteinising hormone)
    • Progesterone
  • FSH:
    • produced in the pituitary gland
    • causes an egg to mature in one of the ovaries, in a structure called a follicle
    • stimulates the ovaries to produce oestrogen
  • Oestrogen:
    • produced in the ovaries
    • causes the lining of the uterus to grow
    • Stimulates the release of LH and inhibits the release of FSH
  • LH:
    • produced by the pituitary gland
    • stimulates the release of an egg at day 14 (ovulation)
  • Progesterone:
    • produced in the ovaries by the remains of the follicle after ovulation
    • maintains the lining of the uterus during the second half of the cycle, when the level of progesterone falls, the lining breaks down
    • inhibits the release of LH and FSH