Background: The time of ovulation has since long been believed to be concealed to male heterosexual partners. Recent studies have, however, called for revision of this notion. For example, male testosterone concentrations have been shown to increase in response to olfactory ovulation cues, which could be biologically relevant by increasing sexual drive and aggressiveness. However, this phenomenon has not previously been investigated in real-life human settings. We therefore thought it of interest to test the hypothesis that males' salivary testosterone concentrations are influenced by phases of their female partners' menstrual cycle; expecting a testosterone peak at ovulation. Methods. Thirty young, healthy, heterosexual couples were recruited. During the course of 30-40 days, the women registered menses and ovulation, while the men registered sexual activity, physical exercise, alcohol intake and illness (confounders), and obtained daily saliva samples for testosterone measurements. All data, including the registered confounders, were subjected to multiple regression analysis. Results: In contrast to the hypothesis, the ovulation did not affect the testosterone levels, and the resulting testosterone profile during the menstrual cycle was on the average flat. The specific main hypothesis, that male testosterone levels on the day of ovulation would be higher than day 4 of the cycle, was clearly contradicted by a type II error(β)-analysis (< 14.3% difference in normalized testosterone concentration; β= 0.05). Conclusions: Even though an ovulation-related salivary testosterone peak was observed in individual cases, no significant effect was found on a group level. © 2012 Strom et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Strom, J. O., Ingberg, E., Druvefors, E., Theodorsson, A., & Theodorsson, E. (2012). The female menstrual cycle does not influence testosterone concentrations in male partners. Journal of Negative Results in BioMedicine, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1477-5751-11-1
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.