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Summary. Basal body temperature (BBT) was measured continuously by radiotelemetry throughout 14 chimpanzee menstrual cycles and correlated with daily observations of the sexual skin swelling. A biphasic BBT shift from a pre-nadir mean of 36·12°C to a post-nadir mean of 36·67°C was observed in 12 cycles. The temperature nadir showed a close temporal relationship with detumescence of the sexual skin swelling (an early luteal event), but the rate of temperature rise after the nadir was variable.
In 3 normal cycles studied, the temperature nadir occurred the day after a urinary oestrone peak, but there was no consistent temporal association between BBT rise and pregnanediol increment. Progesterone secretion is therefore probably not the sole determinant of the BBT shift; the changing oestrogen/progestin ratio may be the more important factor regulating body temperature during the luteal phase.
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A. Lacreuse, L. Chennareddi, K. G. Gould, K. Hawkes, S. R. Wijayawardana, J. Chen, K. A. Easley, and J. G. Herndon Menstrual Cycles Continue into Advanced Old Age in the Common Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) Biol Reprod, September 1, 2008; 79(3): 407 - 412. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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