BBC Science Focus

NEW STUDY SHEDS LIGHT ON HOW THE MOON REALLY IMPACTS MENSTRUAL CYCLES

Research shows that women’s menstrual cycles follow the same rules as their body’s circadian rhythms

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“Menstrual cycles usually have a monthly pattern, but the mechanisms that decide this pattern are mysterious”

Many people believe that women’s menstrual cycles are governed by the Moon. Even Charles Darwin theorised that this lunar link came from our species’ time as seashore-dwelling creatures who lived in sync with the tides.

But a new study, published in the journal Science Advances, reveals that these cycles likely don’t follow the 29.5-day cycles of the Moon and are instead governed by our bodies’ internal clocks.

What’s more, the research found that any present lunar link varies by continent. The scientists observed that in Europe, for example, menstrual cycles tend to begin at the waxing crescent, but for North American women it often begins at the full Moon.

Menstrual cycles usually have a monthly pattern, but the mechanisms that decide this pattern are mysterious. To better understand how they work, the researcher­s analysed the data of almost 27,000 menstrual cycles from over 3,000 European and North American women. Specifical­ly, they tracked the first day of menstruati­on in each of these cycles.

They found there was only a weak correlatio­n between menstrual and lunar cycles. The fact that the correlatio­n varied across continents supported their theory; this is an indication, they say, that any lunar correlatio­n is in fact likely driven more by lifestyle factors (such as sleep-wake cycles) than the Moon.

The authors do note, however, that in communitie­s where women are more exposed to moonlight, the influence of the Moon on menstrual cycles may be stronger.

What’s more likely though, the paper says, is that the body’s internal clock, known as the circadian clock, maintains the rhythm of women’s ovaries. That’s because the data revealed something the researcher­s called ‘phase jumps.’ This is when a woman’s internal clock falls out of sync with regular cycle lengths and selfcorrec­ts by jumping ahead to the next stable state. “If the cycle lengthens, for any reason, this clock-based process adapts to quickly shorten it,” Dr Claude Gronfier, the paper’s author, told BBC Science Focus.

Phase jumps are signs of a phenomenon known as ‘relative coordinati­on’, a typical event in circadian clocks. One example of this, the scientists say, is the out- of- sync feeling that happens after you’ve travelled across time zones.

In other areas of human health, including cancer, sleep disorders and depression, scientists have taken chronobiol­ogical approaches such as light therapy to find successful treatments. This research opens up possibilit­ies for similar and new medical treatments for ovulation disorders, which could even help to improve fertility.

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