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. 1983 Jun;90(6):543-8.
doi: 10.1111/j.1471-0528.1983.tb08965.x.

Plasma progesterone levels as an index of ovulation

Plasma progesterone levels as an index of ovulation

U Abdulla et al. Br J Obstet Gynaecol. 1983 Jun.

Abstract

Plasma progesterone levels were measured in three groups of untreated women. (1) Nine women with follicle rupture, proved by laparotomy or laparoscopy, had values of greater than or equal to 40 nmol/l on days 18-24 (days-10- -5 from the next period); thus a value of less than 40 nmol/l should not be taken as evidence of ovulation. (2) Nineteen healthy women with normal menstrual histories had hormone assays on alternate days during one cycle. In five of them all values were less than 38 nmol/l. (3) Forty women had a single progesterone assay on days 20-29 of a conceptual cycle. Eight of them had a level less than 40 nmol/l. Ovulation had certainly occurred in all of them, but it is difficult to assess whether the sample timing was optimal since there was no following menstrual period. Progesterone levels in drug-induced conceptual cycles were in general higher than those in spontaneous pregnancy cycles. Women with luteinization of the unruptured follicle frequently had values of greater than 40 nmol/l. Conversely, a secretory endometrium was not uncommon in cycles with values of less than 38 nmol/l.

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