C-reactive Protein Across the Ovarian Cycle in Urban Poor and Urban Better-off Bolivian Women Open Access
Karamali, Mariam Karim (2010)
Abstract
C-reactive Protein Across the Ovarian Cycle in Urban Poor and
Urban Better-off Bolivian
Women
Abstract
By Mariam K. Karamali
C-reactive protein (CRP) is part of the non-specific inflammatory response that provides a glimpse of immune system functioning. Recent research has identified it as a useful biomarker for assessing health status and risk of many chronic diseases. Previous studies have found that CRP fluctuations throughout the ovarian cycle are due to changes in concentrations of various reproductive hormones. The role of life history strategies to explain the relationship between reproductive hormones and CRP remains speculative. Life history theory suggests that environmental stressors play a key role in helping our body to decide how much energy is allocated to vital life functions, such as reproduction and maintenance. It is hypothesized that due to different environmental stressors, Bolivian women will have higher levels of CRP than women in Western populations and that there is a tradeoff between reproduction and maintenance such that as estradiol levels increase, CRP levels will decrease. A survey was administered to women in La Paz, Bolivia and blood spots were collected on 5-6 days of two consecutive ovarian cycles in 30 Urban poor and 31 Urban better-off Bolivian women. The blood samples were assayed for estradiol, progesterone, and CRP. Results showed that urban poor women had higher BMI (P=0.00) and lower levels of estradiol (p=0.02) compared to urban better-off women. BMI is positively associated with CRP (P=0.009) and negatively associated with estradiol (P=0.004). CRP levels are also mediated by BMI. CRP levels in Bolivia were lower than reported values from women in Western populations and CRP did not vary significantly between cycle days or cycle phases, contrary to the hypotheses. CRP differences due to socioeconomic status may be observed with a greater sample size and/or may be due to ecological differences including differences in: histories, inactivity, stress, or diet quality between the two populations. In this sample, CRP is independent of hormonal fluctuations in the ovarian cycle and is shaped by individual lifestyle differences, which may allow it to be a useful biomarker.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
I.
Introduction.................................................................................Page
1
II.Methods......................................
...............................................Page 37
III.Results
......................................................................................Page
50
IV.Discussion...................................................................................Page
66
V.Conclusion ....................................
..............................................Page 85
VI.Reference...................................................................................
Page 86
Figures
Figure 1
..........................................................................................Page
7
Figure
2...........................................................................................Page
53
Figure
3...........................................................................................Page
54
Tables
Table
1.............................................................................................Page
48
Table
2............................................................................................
Page 51
Table
3.............................................................................................Page
52
Table
4.............................................................................................Page
52
Table
5.............................................................................................Page
55
Table
6.............................................................................................Page
56
Table
7.............................................................................................Page
58
Table
8.............................................................................................Page
78
About this Honors Thesis
School | |
---|---|
Department | |
Degree | |
Submission | |
Language |
|
Research Field | |
Keyword | |
Committee Chair / Thesis Advisor | |
Committee Members |
Primary PDF
Thumbnail | Title | Date Uploaded | Actions |
---|---|---|---|
C-reactive Protein Across the Ovarian Cycle in Urban Poor and Urban Better-off Bolivian Women () | 2018-08-28 10:33:53 -0400 |
|
Supplemental Files
Thumbnail | Title | Date Uploaded | Actions |
---|