Women Have Reduced Ability to Discriminate Body Odors During the Withdrawal Period of Oral Contraception

Chemosens Percept. 2020;13(2):123-131. doi: 10.1007/s12078-019-09273-9. Epub 2019 Dec 6.

Abstract

Introduction: Women's olfactory perception varies across the menstrual cycle. The influence of oral contraceptives on this variability remains unclear.

Methods: To further estimate this, we assessed discrimination performance for both body odors and ordinary odorants in 36 women, 18 naturally ovulating, and 18 using oral contraceptives. Each participant was tested once a week over the course of a month, and data was then parsed into menstrual phases.

Results: In naturally ovulating women, at the transition from follicular to luteal phases, there was a decline of 19% (p = 0.003) in olfactory discrimination of body odors but not ordinary odorants. In turn, in women using oral contraceptives, only at a later time of the month, at a point corresponding to the late luteal phase and shift from post-ovulation to pre-menstruation, was there a decline of 20% (p = 0.002) in olfactory discrimination performance. Moreover, when we reorganized the data from women using oral contraceptives in order to separately assess the contraceptive withdrawal period (the few days off pills), we observed a 23% reduction (p = 0.01) in discrimination accuracy of body odors but not ordinary odorants during this time alone.

Conclusions: Women have reduced ability to discriminate body odors during the withdrawal period of oral contraception.

Implications: If women indeed consider men's body odor in their mate selections, then the oral contraception withdrawal period may not be the best time to make such decisions.

Keywords: Olfaction; body odor; menstrual cycle; oral contraception.