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Read Dr. Cutler's prior research paper on this subject, her 1980
paper in which she discovers lunar and menstrual phase locking. click here.


LUNAR INFLUENCES ON
THE REPRODUCTIVE CYCLE IN WOMEN

By Winnifred B. Cutler 1,2,5, Wolfgang M. Schleidt 3, Erika Freidmann 4, George Preti 2, and Robert Stine 6
Copyright c. Wayne State University Press, 1987
Journal: HUMAN BIOLOGY December 1987, Volume 59 Number 6

ABSTRACT:

Several exogenous influences on the human female's menstrual cycle length have recently been demonstrated. Previously, sexual behavior and pheromonal influences have been described. This report evaluates lunar cyclicity patterns. A relationship is demonstrated between the onset of menstruation, among women who have 29.5 + 1 day menstrual cycles, and the onset of full moon. Four separate prospectively gathered sets of data are presented from different years and seasons. It is demonstrated that these women tend to menstruate in the full of the moon with a diminishing likelihood of menses onset as distance from full moon increases.

INTRODUCTION:

The length of a woman's menstrual cycle has long been known to bear some reflection of the underlying endocrine milieu as well as her potential for fertility. Vollman at al. (1968, 1970, 1977) as well as Treloar et al. (1967, 1981) through their extensive prospective studies, have clearly shown that women whose cycles approach the 29.5 day span have the highest likelihood of fertile cycles, while women whose cycles become longer or shorter have a proportionately diminishing incidence of fertile cycles. About 28% of reproductively mature women show a 29.5 + 1 day cycle length (Vollman 1968, 1970, 1977).

That the most fertile reproductive cycle has the same length as the lunar cycle, i.e. 29.5 days, is an intriguing biological coincidence. In 1979, we reported that although previous investigators had failed to find a relationship between menses onset and the lunar cycle, their failure derived from the inappropriateness to the methods employed. By selecting the subpopulation of women (approximately 30%) who cycle as often as the moon does, i.e. 29.5+1 day, a significant pattern was revealed. There was an increased likelihood of menstruation onset in the light half of the lunar month.
Thus, in a selected population of 312 women, prospective menstrual cycle records maintained during the Autumn of 1977 showed that 69% of the subsample whose menstrual length was 29.5+ 1 day showed menses onset within 7.5 days of the full moon (Cutler 1980a). A year later, Friedmann (1981) replicated this phenomenon, reporting that 65% of a similarly sized population menstruated in the light half of the lunar cycle. In her sample, the split was optimized with a 3 day lag period after the quarter; i.e. the month was bisected 3 days after the first and third quarter.

In this report, we re-evaluate those data using a more sophisticated analytic method and we add data from prospective records collected during 2 other experiments. We hypothesize that a systematic relationship between day of the lunar cycle and density of menses onsets might exist. We also explore whether the season can influence these lunar, menstrual associations.

More recently, exogenous influences on menstrual cycle length and other reproductive endocrine patterns have been reported (Cutler et al. 1979a,b,c, 1980, 1983,1985,1986; McFalls 1973; McCoy et al. 1985). For example, women who engage in regular weekly heterosexual intercourse tend to have significantly more 29.5+3 day cycles, higher incidences of fertile patterns of basal body temperature graphs, and higher levels of circulating estrogen in both the reproductive and the climateric years than women who have either celibate or sporadic patters of sexual behavior (Cutler et al. 1979a, b, 1980b, 1983,1985,1986a; McCoy et al. 1985). Through analyses of data trends, the direction of causality was considered to be behaviorally manipulable (Cutler et al. 1985,1986); regular weekly behavior appears sufficient to create 29.5+3 day cycles.

Investigation into the underlying mechanisms by which sexual behavior may affect the neuroendocrine rhythm of women has yielded evidence for a pheromonal influence (McClintock 1983, 1984; Cutler et al. 1984, 1986; Preti et al. 1986). Studies in our laboratories employing extracts of axillary secretions from donor men and donor women were shown to significantly alter the timing and length of menstrual cycles of nulliparous women in a double-blind, placebo-controlled study (Cutler et al. 1986; Preti et al. 1986, 1987). Consequently, there appear to be several exogenous influences which promote lunar type cycle lengths in women.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Collection of Menstrual Data.

Sample and Analysis of Menstrual Calendars.

Table 1. Sample Populations 1976-1983
Year
Season
City
Site
Age/Rank
Total Sample
Size
# of 29+ 1 Day Cycles
% of Sample with 29+1 Day Menstrual Cycle Lengths

1976
Fall
Philadelphia
Univ. of Penn
College Sophomores & Juniors
127
40
31%
1977
Fall
Philadelphia
Univ. of Penn
19-22 yrs
312
68
22%
1979
Fall
New York
Brooklyn College
19-35 yrs
305
97
32%
1983
Spring
Philadelphia
Monell Chemical.
Senses Center
19-21 yrs**
94
____
24
____
26%
____
838
229
27%


Table 2. Raw Data Showing the Number of Subjects who Began Menses on each "Lunar Day" where Day 1 indicates one day AFTER New Moon
Days since New Moon Fall 1976 Fall 1977 Fall 1979 Spring 1983
1
0 1 4 0
2
1 0 3 0
3
0 3 4 1
4
0 3 4 0
5
1 2 2 1
6
3 0 2 0
7
1 1 2 1
8
3 1 4 0
9
1 4 2 0
10
2 3 1 3
11
1 4 2 2
12
4 3 8 1
13
2 3 3 1
14
2 3 6 2
15
1 5 4 0
16
1 3 0 1
17
2 2 4 1
18
3 4 0 1
19
0 1 9 0
20
1 4 2 1
21
2 5 5 1
22
2 2 5 2
23
2 1 6 2
24
0 4 1 1
25
0 1 3 1
26
1 1 6 1
27
1 3 4 0
28
3 1 0 0
29
0 0 0 0
30
0 0 1 0

Table 3. Significance Levels of Comparisons of the Observed Onset Distributions to a Uniform Distribution (Diagonal) and Each Other (Off-Diagonal)

Period
(n)
Fall 76
Fall 77
Fall 79
Spring 83

Fall 76
(40)
nsd
nsd
.10
nsd
Fall 77
(68)
.05
.10
nsd
Fall 79
(97)
.05
nsd
Spring 83
(24)
nsd

Comparisons to the uniform are based on the Vn staticstic of Stephens (1965) and the comparisons between samples are based on the Vnm test of Stephens (1965) and Maag (1968) NSD= no significant difference




A copy of the full article is available in most university libraries but can also be ordered through Athena Institute
A bibliography of Dr. Cutler's Published Work

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