Showing posts with label humans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label humans. Show all posts

Saturday, February 28, 2015

#29 Is it a coincidence that a female's menstrual cycle is equivalent to the moon's orbital period? Are they connected?

This question comes from Tom S. via the blog.

There are a couple things in this question I want to address. First, if it is a coincidence it is not connected. In science there is a concept of "coincidence or correlation does not imply causation or connection". There is a great humor blog called Spurious Correlations that shows that you can make anything correlate.

That aside, the second and more important concept to address is that this assumes all women have the same menstrual cycle. This is an assumption that is often made but not reality. What it comes down to is that this concept is comparing two estimates as if they are real, measured and accurate numbers. I think this is what we will address, as well as the moon cycle itself.

How long does it take the moon to orbit the Earth?

This in itself is a complicated question because the moon phase appearance is influenced by the moon orbiting the Earth and the Earth orbiting the Sun. The moon orbits the Earth in just over 27 days. However, it is 29 and a half days for the moon to pass through all the phases. (Discussion of Lunar cycles) Which of these would we consider the moon cycle? The 28 days we usually hear is an average of these two time lengths. (We will see in this discussion that a lot of common knowledge on the subject is based in comparing multiple averages and not real numbers.) In truth, every common calender lists the moon cycle as 29.5 days and not the 28 that we associate with the menstrual cycle. You can read about all the calender relations and much more on lunar cycles here.

The female cycle

There is a huge misnomer in common knowledge that a female cycle is fixed at a certain number of days. This is not true. The length of a female cycle changes for many reasons and may change over a woman's life time. To this discussion I think it is important to look at some of the many things that can change the length of a woman's menstrual cycle. Most women fall in a 21 to 35 day cycle while it is not uncommon for women to exceed the 35 days as well. This time period is for the average woman without the influence of medications, such as birth control, or other influences from the list we will be discussing below. Of those 21-35+ days, 2-7 days is spent bleeding. This is the numbers for adults. However, for teens and pre-teens the range is even greater and may be 21-45 days or longer between periods.

Circadian Rhythm and Sleep

Our natural internal rhythms can alter the frequency and duration of a menstrual cycle. Sleeping excessively or not enough can have an impact on menstrual cycle length. Chronic insomnia can affect the length of a menstrual cycle causing a woman's normal cycle to be longer than the 35 days at the upper end of the average. Melatonin levels can change the length of a cycle too. This is important because of the use of over-the-counter melatonin for sleep which makes this influence more common than in the past. There is plenty of research that shows sleep rhythms can have such an effect on the cycle that it can impact fertility.
A research paper about circadian rhythms and menstraul cycle


Eating and Weight

The amount one eats can impact length of menstrual cycle. Decrease in food due to starvation, be it external such as famine or internal such as anorexia or bulimia, can  decrease the frequency of menstrual cycles. In some cases lack of food can eliminate the menstrual cycle completely. On the other side, over eating and being obese can decrease frequency of menstrual cycles. Types and quality of food can also affect menstrual cycle duration. Other things such as alcohol and caffeine consumption can alter period length.
Research paper weight and sex-hormones
Research on anovulation
Bariatric surgery and menstrual/fertility issues

Exercise

Intense exercise can alter fertility and menstrual cycles as well. Called exercised induced Amenorrhea, this is a complete lack of menstrual cycle but it can also be a decrease in frequency.

Medications and Illness

A large number of illnesses can affect period duration. Everything from anemia to uterine cancer can alter menstrual cycles. Medications can also affect the duration and intensity of menstrual cycles. Many mood stabilizing medications such as anti-depressants can increase or decrease the length of menstrual cycles.
Diseases and conditions that are effected by or affect menstrual cycles.

Age

Young and old women both experience irregular menstrual cycle lengths. Between the ages of 25 and 40 women experience the most regularity in periods. Prior to the age of 25 menstrual cycle irregularity is related to the hormone imbalances related to sexual maturity and development. After 40 the irregularity is due to peri-menopause.

Stress Levels

High stress levels can trigger less frequent or erratic menstrual cycles. At the root of this is the body mechanism, the same one in play with starvation, that signals that this is a poor time to conceive a child.This body stimulus can reduce the amount of menstrual cycles, which reduces the number of ovulations or chances to become pregnant.
Stress and Menstration
Affects of stress on women's health
Research paper on job stress and menstrual length


Other considerations.

The often cited study by Winnifred B. Cutler in 1980 that is used as proof that women's cycles are related to the moon doesn't prove anything. In the study it was shown that 40% of the studied women had a period start within 2 weeks of the full moon, i.e. within half a month of the full moon. The two week time frame is very large considering this is half of the entire moon cycle. The other thing to consider is most of the women, 60%, showed no relationship at all with time of period and full moon.


More reading:

Exercise and weight and menstrual cycles
Missed periods, exercise and osteoporosis
Stress, ovulation and bone health
List of everyday things that can affect periods.
Causes of Amenorrhea
The moon and activities
Moon cycle length and estrus length in multiple animals.
Do women who live together actually synchronize?

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

#19. This will make your skin crawl....

I am both repelled and fascinated by parasites, particularly those that effect and can be seen on and in the skin. So this post is dedicated to a discussion I had about parasites and sharing some of the ones that really creep me out.


The Bot Fly, or warble or gadfly, are flies that lay their eggs in the skin of the host (or some grow in the stomach). These larvae then eat the flesh and poke out holes to the surface for gas exchange. Eventually, they will climb out. While they are truly skin crawling they do not cause permanent damage or death to the host. One of the most ick inducing infestation, IMHO, is the botfly incubating in the human eyelid.
How botfly maggots are extracted.


Scabies, from the Latin word "to scratch or itch". This is a small mite that infests the skin. Scabies mites burrow into the skin and then live there in burrows. There are several times of scabies, each with their own infestation and spreading rates. Norwegian or Crusted Scabies is the worst causing crusts of skin under which the scabies colony lives. This is also one of the most contagious forms as it causes the most intense scratching. Scabies is not deadly, in most cases, and can be treated with medication. From the CDC.

A delightful illustration of the scabies mite in the skin.

 Screwworm. The larvae of another fly, this of the Screwfly. This fly lays its eggs on open wounds. The maggots then emerge and burrow into the wound to feast on the host's flesh. These do not kill the host as they do not remain in the host for long before dropping off/chewing out to pupate in the ground. 
Video of a Nasal Myiasis (I am not very squeamish and this was quite possibly one of the ickiest things I have ever seen.)

Gnathostomiasis or larva migrans profundus is introduced by eating poorly cooked fish, frogs, crustaceans and other meats. After incubation these larvae begin to eat their way from the digestive tract to the skin. Due to humans not being the usual vector for these parasites they do not complete their life cycle, are hard to detect and can cause many complications. This larvae migrates around beneath the surface of the skin. An in depth discussion here.
Life cycle of larva migrans profundus
Guinea worm is contracted through contaminated drinking water. This is a roundworm that starts in the intestinal tract and the female migrates the body. This female usually leaves the body through the feet and can be as large as a 3 foot long spaghetti noodle. One method of extracting these worms is to roll them around a stick and gently pull them out.
On the NY Times (A short documentary about the eradication efforts.
The Carter Center which is trying to eradicate the Guinea worm
On the CDC

Chigoe flea is a type of flea which burrows into the skin. Once inside it develops causing a painful, reddened swelling. Eventually a black dot appears on the swelling which is the hind legs, breathing organs and reproductive organs poking from the skin. While the flea is not directly harmful, secondary infections and large scale infestations can be very dangerous for the host. These fleas infect most warm-blooded hosts.
Video of the parasite from National Geographic