<P> Blood test results should always be interpreted using the reference ranges provided by the laboratory that performed the results . Example reference ranges are listed below . </P> <P> Progesterone is produced in high amounts in the ovaries (by the corpus luteum) from the onset of puberty to menopause, and is also produced in smaller amounts by the adrenal glands after the onset of adrenarche in both males and females . To a lesser extent, progesterone is produced in nervous tissue, especially in the brain, and in adipose (fat) tissue, as well . </P> <P> During human pregnancy, progesterone is produced in increasingly high amounts by the ovaries and placenta . At first, the source is the corpus luteum that has been "rescued" by the presence of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) from the conceptus . However, after the 8th week, production of progesterone shifts to the placenta . The placenta utilizes maternal cholesterol as the initial substrate, and most of the produced progesterone enters the maternal circulation, but some is picked up by the fetal circulation and used as substrate for fetal corticosteroids . At term the placenta produces about 250 mg progesterone per day . </P> <P> An additional animal source of progesterone is milk products . After consumption of milk products the level of bioavailable progesterone goes up . </P>

Where does the progesterone that helps maintain the pregnancy come from