Menopause Flashcards
How long before menopause does peri-menopause occur?
- Months to years. Quite variable
What is the definition of menopause?
- Lack of menses for 1 year
What is the average age of menopause?
51 years old
Why do estrogen levels decline in women in menopause?
- Estrogen produced by the granulosa cells in the developing follicle. In menopause no follicle so no estrogen production
What happens to levels of follicle stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone during menopause and why?
- LH and FSH increase
- Estrogen and other ovarian hormones, like inhibin, typically have negative feedback on gonadotrophs, with decreased estrogen this does not occur
Where does the majority of a post menopausal womans estrogen come from?
- Fat cells convert circulating androstenedione into a less potent form of estrogen
Why do peri-menopausal women get irregular periods?
- Usually the result of anovulatory cycles as the body has difficulty stimulating follicles for ovulation
What are the clinical features of menopause?
- Vasomotor (tends to improve w time)
- hot flashes, night sweats, nausea, palpitations, sensation of insects crawling on them (formication)
- Urogenital atrophy
- dysparunia, vaginal dryness/pruritis, urinary frequency/urgency/incontinence
- Skeletal
- osteoporosis, MSK pain
- Decreased breast size, skin thinning
- Psychological
- mood changes, irritable, fatigue, low libido, memory loss
What are some long term health effects associated with menopause?
- Cardiovascular disease
- Cerebrovascular disease
- Osteoporosis
How does the age of menopause relate to risk of breast cancer?
- More time exposed to estrogen increases risk of breast cancer
- Early menopause decreases risk and late menopause increases risk
What effect does estrogen have on the bones?
- Estrogen recetors on bones, estrogen shown to increase osteoblast activity
- Bone resporption and osteoclast activity increased in menopause
What is a dowager’s hump?
- Kyphosis in the thoracic spine (old lady hump)
- Can occur from wedge compression fractures due to osteoporosis
Why do underweight women have a higher risk of fractures in menopause?
- Less fat and therefore less circulating estrogen produced by conversion of androstenedione to estrogen
Testing for follicle stimulating hormone, what level are you expecting in a post-menopausal woman?
- Greater than 30 IU/L
Why are progesterones added to HRT regimes if symptoms are primarily caused by estrogen deficiency?
- Unopposed estrogen leads to proliferation of endometrium, which can become hyperplastic and neoplastic
- Progesterone is protective by counteracting this effect