Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/43395
Title: The menstrual cycle in the normal human female
Authors: Farrugia Randon, Robert
Keywords: Menstrual cycle
Women -- Physiology
Luteal phase
Menstruation
Issue Date: 1968
Publisher: Malta Medical Students Association
Citation: Farrugia Randon, R. (1968). The menstrual cycle in the normal human female. Chest-piece, 2(9), 41-44.
Abstract: The menstrual cycle is a sequence of morphologic changes in the reproductive system, particularly of the endometrium, that culminate in an episode of uterine bleeding. The cycle may be regarded as consisting of three phases: (a) proliferative (b) secretory (c) decidual or desquamative, but desquamation is more generally included in the proliferative phase. Typical length is twenty-eight days. Clinically, cycle ranges from twenty-five to thirty-one days and this is accepted as normal. It has, however, been found that only 53% of cycles may be expected to fall within this range. The question when exactly in the cycle ovulation does take place is an important one, and will be reviewed briefly after the description of the cyclic changes occuring in genital sites have been fully dealt with.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/43395
Appears in Collections:Chest-piece, volume 2, issue 9
Chest-piece, volume 2, issue 9

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