Menstrual Cycle Overview - The Monthly Clock
- Menstrual Cycle: Rhythmic physiological changes in fertile females, preparing for potential pregnancy.
- Menarche: Onset of menstruation.
- Menopause: Cessation of menstruation.
- Normal length: 28 ± 7 days.
- Two Interconnected Cycles:
- Ovarian Cycle: Governs egg development. Key phases:
- Follicular (maturation)
- Ovulation (release)
- Luteal (corpus luteum)
- Uterine Cycle: Prepares uterine lining. Key phases:
- Menstrual (shedding)
- Proliferative (rebuilding)
- Secretory (thickening)
- 📌 Mnemonic (Ovarian phases): FOLlow Ovulation Luckily.
- Ovarian Cycle: Governs egg development. Key phases:
⭐ Day 1 of the cycle is the first day of menstruation.
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Hormonal Control - Hormone Harmony
- Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Ovarian (HPO) Axis: Master regulator.
- Hypothalamus: Pulsatile Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone (GnRH).
- Anterior Pituitary: Follicle-Stimulating Hormone (FSH) & Luteinizing Hormone (LH).
- Ovary: Estrogen (E2), Progesterone (P4), Inhibins (A & B).
- Key Hormone Actions:
- FSH: Follicular development, ↑E2.
- LH: Ovulation, corpus luteum (CL) formation & P4 secretion.
- Estrogen (E2): Endometrial proliferation. Dual feedback:
- Low E2: Negative feedback on FSH/LH.
- Sustained high E2 (>200 pg/mL for >48 hrs): Positive feedback → LH surge.
- Progesterone (P4): Secretory endometrium, maintains pregnancy. Negative feedback.
- Inhibins: Suppress FSH (Inhibin B - follicular; Inhibin A - luteal).
⭐ The LH surge is the primary trigger for ovulation, occurring approximately 24-36 hours before follicle rupture.
Ovarian Cycle - Egg's Grand Show

1. Follicular Phase (FSH-driven, variable length):
- Recruitment: Primordial → Primary → Antral follicle.
- Selection: One dominant Graafian follicle (~20-25 mm) matures.
- FSH: Stimulates follicle growth, estrogen synthesis.
- Estrogen: ↑FSH receptors; high levels induce LH surge.
- Two-cell, two-gonadotropin:
- Theca (LH): Androgens.
- Granulosa (FSH): Androgens → Estradiol (aromatase).
2. Ovulation (~Day 14, LH surge-triggered):
- LH surge (from ↑estrogen): Oocyte meiosis I completion, stigma formation, oocyte release.
3. Luteal Phase (Progesterone-dominant, fixed ~14 days):
- Corpus Luteum (CL) forms from ruptured follicle.
- CL secretes: Progesterone (dominant), Estrogen.
⭐ Corpus luteum is the main source of progesterone in the luteal phase, vital for endometrial receptivity and early pregnancy.
- Fate:
- No pregnancy: CL degenerates → Corpus Albicans (↓hormones → menses).
- Pregnancy: hCG maintains CL.
Ovarian Cycle Flow:
Uterine Cycle - Womb's Wallpaper Reno
- Menstrual Phase (Days 1-5):
- Shedding of stratum functionalis due to ischemia.
- Trigger: ↓ Progesterone & Estrogen → spiral artery constriction.
- Endometrial thickness: ~1-2 mm.
- Proliferative Phase (Days 6-14): "Rebuilding the lining"
- Driven by ↑ Estrogen (ovarian follicles).
- Regeneration & growth of stratum functionalis.
- Glands: straight, tubular; Arteries: spiral, elongate.
- Endometrial thickness: up to ~8-10 mm.
- Secretory Phase (Days 15-28): "Preparing for implantation"
- Driven by ↑ Progesterone (corpus luteum).
- Differentiation: glands become tortuous, secrete glycogen-rich fluid.
- ↑ Vascularity, edema; spiral arteries become highly coiled.
- Maximal thickness: ~12-16 mm.
- 📌 Mnemonic: Secretory phase = Soft, Spongy, Swollen.

⭐ Pinopodes, small protrusions on endometrial cells, appear during the implantation window (mid-secretory, days 20-24), crucial for blastocyst adhesion.
High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- FSH initiates follicular growth; LH surge is crucial for ovulation.
- Estrogen (follicular) drives proliferative phase; Progesterone (luteal) drives secretory phase.
- Corpus luteum secretes progesterone; its regression causes menstruation.
- Ovulation occurs ~14 days before menses, triggered by LH surge.
- LH surge is the best hormonal marker for predicting ovulation.
- Menstruation signifies endometrial shedding due to progesterone withdrawal.
- Mid-cycle estrogen peak causes positive feedback for LH surge.
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