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The menstrual cycle is a term used to describe monthly events that occur within a woman's
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body in preparation for the possibility of pregnancy. Each month, an egg is released
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from an ovary in a process called ovulation. At the same time, the lining of the uterus
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thickens, ready for pregnancy. If fertilization does not take place, the lining of the uterus
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is shed in menstrual bleeding and the cycle starts over.
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An ovary contains hundreds of thousands of primary oocytes - immature eggs, or ova. Each
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of these is enclosed in a structure called a follicle, and at this stage -- a primordial
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follicle. The menstrual cycle is under control of hormones
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secreted by the pituitary gland and the ovaries. The pituitary itself is under control of the
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hypothalamus. The hypothalamus produces a hormone called
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the gonadotropin-releasing hormone or GnRH. GnRH stimulates the anterior lobe of the pituitary
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to secrete follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). FSH travels in the bloodstream to the ovaries
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and stimulates a group of follicles to grow. These primordial follicles develop into primary
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follicles and then secondary follicles. These produce a hormone named estrogen which acts
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to stimulate the growth of the endometrium -- the inner lining of the uterus. The secondary
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follicles compete with each other and only one of them will survive and become a mature
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follicle, the rest atrophy and die. The increasing level of estrogen also acts
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on the hypothalamus and the anterior pituitary to increase the level of GnRH and induce the
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production of another hormone -- luteinizing hormone (LH). A surge in LH secretion triggers
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ovulation - the release of the egg from the follicle and the ovary. The egg is then swept
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up by the fimbriae and taken into the uterine tube.
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Fertilization by a spermatozoon, when it occurs, usually takes place in the ampulla, the widest
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section of the fallopian tube. The fertilized egg immediately begins the process of development
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while travelling toward the uterus. After 6 days it becomes a blastocyst and is implanted
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into the endometrium of the uterus. Meanwhile, the left-over of the ruptured follicle
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has become a corpus luteum which secretes progesterone. Progesterone further stimulates
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uterine development making it a nutritious bed for the embryo in the event of pregnancy.
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In the absence of pregnancy, the corpus luteum atrophies and progesterone level falls. This
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leads to the breakdown of the endometrium, menstruation begins and the cycle starts over.