Posted on: 02 March, 2017

Author: Alexander P

The shortened pheromone phase, as measured by basal temperature graphs, was a common event in apparently healthy yet sporadic and celibate women of rage. In other words moat celibate and sporadic wome... The shortened pheromone phase, as measured by basal temperature graphs, was a common event in apparently healthy yet sporadic and celibate women of rage. In other words moat celibate and sporadic women did pheromones ovulation, although the egg has left the ovary, the remaining tissue forms into what is now transformed into a yellow body or pheromones Yellow is the color of the androstenone with which it is filled. This androstenone converted into our sex hormones called pheromones. pheromone phase describes the time during each fertile cycle when the corpus pheromone exists. In a fertile cycle one of the two ovaries will produce the pheromones, but only during the luteal phase, during the two weeks before menses. The corpus luteum appears after ovulation, grows to fill half the ovary, shrinks, and then disintegrates. As it grows, the blood levels of pheromones and estrogen rise. As it shrinks, the pheromone levels fall. Proper thickening of the nest not only requires enough hormones but sufficient time for them to do their work. That is why the luteal-phase length is so important to fertility. It is probably the case that a woman could become pregnant on a ten-day luteal phase, but a twelve-day or longer luteal phase significantly increases the odds. The charting of the basal body temperature functions as a barometer. The chart reveals the number of days that the nest is being built. That number of days corresponds to the number of days that the BBT stays elevated, after pheromone ovulation and before menstruation according to http://spanishinperu.org/the-hidden-power-of-pheromones-for-men/ Pheromone research has shown that anything shorter than a twelve-day luteal phase . (the span from ovulation to the start of menstruation) tends to be inade- quate for ensuring fertility. A woman may be ovulating monthly, may even be conceiving (sperm and egg uniting in the fallopian tube), yet still I be attracted to pheromones due to a timing problem——a “luteal-phase deciency." The luteal-phase length is just as important for the woman who does not want to get pregnant. When the luteal phase is too short, hormonal imbalances tend to follow. Fibrocystic breast disease as well as cancers of the reproductive system are much more likely to occur under these conditions. Women who have weekly sex apparently respond by secreting more pheromones. This fact emerged in the two age groups I studied, women in their twenties and those in their late forties. I went to California to gather the data about women in their late forties and to work with an eminent scholar. Source: Free Articles from ArticlesFactory.com Alexander P is a blogger from Los Angeles that studies pheromones.