Menopause Flashcards
Define Menopause.
Absence of menses for >12 months (retrospective diagnosis)
- Depletion of oocytes → reduction in ovarian progesterone, oestradiol and testosterone
What is the average age of the menopause?
- Average age = 50 ±2
- If <45 = consider investigating premature ovarian insufficiency
- Premature ovarian insufficiency = <40
What are the signs and symptoms of the menopause?
- Approx. 75% get symptoms that last for 7 years:
- Persistent amenorrhea – often initial oligomenorrhoea/irregular or shortened cycles
- Vasomotor symptoms – hot flushes, night sweats, palpitations, headaches
- Urogenital – vaginal dryness, dyspareunia, frequency, dysuria, recurrent UTI
- Psychological – poor concentration, lethargy, mood disturbance, reduced libido = Present first
What are the appropriate investigations for suspected menopause?
- Pregnancy test
- High FSH and LH
- Serum oestradiol
- Prolactin, TFTs, TVUSS (gynae cancer → bleeding = endometrial; no bleeding and mass = ovarian)
What are the routes of HRT?
- Systemic – oral, implant
- Transdermal – hx of DVT/stroke, etc
- Topical – hx of DVT/stroke, etc
- Remember to consider if the women has a uterus or not
What lifestyle changes can be made to help menopause symptoms?
- Lifestyle change – exercise, alcohol, caffeine, weight loss, stress reduction
- Hot flushes = regular exercise, WL, reduce stress
- Sleep disturbance = sleep hygiene (regular, good times), no late evening exercise
- Mood = sleep hygiene, regular exercise, relaxation techniques
- Cognitive symptoms = sleep hygiene, regular exercise
What is the management of the menopause if lifestyle changes don’t help enough with symptoms?
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
- Oestrogens Alone – only in women who have had a hysterectomy
- Oral oestrogen (standard therapy)
- Transdermal oestrogen patch (BMI >30; due to lower VTE risk)
- Oestrogen with Progestogen – progesterone protects endometrium
- Oral
- Transdermal (less clot risk)
- Vaginal creams/gel (less clot risk)
- Implant
- Cyclical/Sequential pattern/SCT (peri-menopausal)
- Monthly = oestrogen every day of month + progesterone for the last 14 days
- Indication = regular periods and menopause symptoms
- 3-monthly = oestrogen every day for 3 months + progesterone for last 14 days
- Indication = irregular periods and menopause symptoms
- Monthly = oestrogen every day of month + progesterone for the last 14 days
- Continuous pattern/CCT – post-menopausal
- Oestrogen and progesterone every day
What are the benefits of HRT?
- Improved menopause symptoms
- Vasomotor, sleep, and genital tract symptoms (dryness, dyspareunia)
- Prevention of osteoporosis
What are the risks of HRT?
- Cancer
- Oestrogen-only = breast cancer, endometrial cancer
- Combined = breast cancer
- VTE
- 2-4x higher
- 2 per 1,000 taking HRT over 7.5 years
What are the side effects of HRT?
- Oestrogenic = breast tenderness, nausea, headaches
- Progestogenic = fluid retention, mood swings, depression
- Unscheduled vaginal bleeding (common in first 3 months of HRT)
- Sequential > continuous HRT
- Investigate if it continues past 6 months (or after a spell of amenorrhoea)
What are the absolute contraindications for HRT?
- Undiagnosed vaginal bleeding
- Pregnancy
- Breast cancer
- Severe liver disease
- History of VTE
- Current thrombophilia (AT-III, FV Leiden)
What are the non-hormonal therapy options for the menopause?
- Vasomotor symptoms
- 1st line = SSRIs - fluoxetine
- 2nd line = citalopram, venlafaxine
- 3rd line (in research) = gabapentin
- Alpha agonists are licenced but there are lots of anti-ACh side effects
- Vaginal dryness = Lubricants
- Osteoporosis treatments (e.g. bisphosphonates)
What are the contraceptive requirements in the menopause?
- Until >1-year amenorrhoeic if >50yo
- Until >2-years amenorrhoeic if <50yo