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Apex Nursing

Reference — Maternal-Newborn

Menstrual Cycle & Reproductive Hormones Reference

One cycle, two clocks — the ovary maturing and releasing an egg, and the endometrium building up to receive it — run by four hormones. Get this and contraception, PCOS, infertility, and menopause all make sense.

Educational use only. A standard 28-day cycle is used for teaching; real cycles vary in length, mostly in the follicular phase. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

The Cycle, Phase by Phase

PhaseOvaryEndometriumHormones
Menstrual (days 1–5)Early follicularShedding of the endometrium (menses)Estrogen & progesterone low (triggers the shed)
Follicular / proliferative (days ~6–13)Follicle maturesEndometrium rebuilds (proliferates)FSH stimulates the follicle; rising estrogen
Ovulation (~day 14)Egg releasedPeak estrogen; receptive mucusLH SURGE triggers ovulation (estrogen peaks just before)
Luteal / secretory (days ~15–28)Corpus luteum formsEndometrium secretory, ready for implantationProgesterone dominant (from corpus luteum); estrogen also present

The Four Hormones

HormoneSourceRole
FSH (follicle-stimulating hormone)Anterior pituitaryStimulates ovarian follicle growth in the follicular phase; rises markedly in menopause as estrogen falls
LH (luteinizing hormone)Anterior pituitaryThe mid-cycle SURGE triggers ovulation; supports the corpus luteum
EstrogenOvarian follicleProliferates the endometrium, thins cervical mucus; loss in menopause drives hot flashes, GSM, and bone/CV risk
ProgesteroneCorpus luteum (then placenta in pregnancy)Makes the endometrium secretory and maintains it; thickens mucus; a fall (no pregnancy) triggers menses

Why It Matters Clinically

Contraception works by interrupting this loop — suppressing the FSH/LH surge (no ovulation), thickening mucus, and thinning the endometrium.

The fertile window centers on ovulation; basal body temperature rises after ovulation (progesterone effect) and cervical mucus becomes thin and stretchy near ovulation.

PCOS is chronic anovulation — no LH surge, no corpus luteum, no progesterone, so the endometrium sees unopposed estrogen (cancer risk).

Menopause is follicular depletion — estrogen falls and FSH climbs.

NCLEX Pearls

  • The LH SURGE triggers ovulation (~day 14 of a 28-day cycle); estrogen peaks just before it.
  • Progesterone (from the corpus luteum) dominates the luteal phase; its fall triggers menstruation if no pregnancy.
  • Cycle length varies mostly in the follicular phase; the luteal phase is fairly fixed at ~14 days.
  • Ovulation signs: thin/stretchy cervical mucus, a slight BBT rise afterward, and mid-cycle.
  • Unopposed estrogen (no progesterone, as in chronic anovulation) → endometrial hyperplasia/cancer risk.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) · AWHONN · American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) — newborn. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →