Menopause Flashcards
1
Q
How is menopause clinically defined? Avg age?
A
- Clinically - 1 yr no menses w/o other explanation
- Avg age = 51.4 yo
2
Q
What changes occur in perimenopause?
A
- Dec inhibin B as # oocytes dec
- FSH rises (esp if meas in early follicular phase around day 3) *first clinical sign**
- Follicular phase length shortens (2-4 days)
- Low Anti-Mullerian hormone
3
Q
What changes occur in early menopause transition?
A
- Hallmark = diff of 7 days or more in length of consecutive cycles
- FSH still elevated but variable
- Inhibin and AMH still low
- LOOP cycles (luteal out of phase event) - 2nd follicle recruited –> prolonged secretion of estradiol; inc estrogen –> migraine, inc bleeding, breast tenderness
- Dec fertility but pregnancy can still occur
4
Q
What changes occur in late menopause transition?
A
- 60 + days w/o menses
- More extreme fluctuations in hormones –> symptoms
- Greater incidence of anovulation
- Lasts 1-3 yrs
- FSH generally elevated but not a reliable diagnostic test
5
Q
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency
A
- Menopause at < 40 yo
- Causes - genetic (Fragile X), adrenal insufficiency, autoimmune, chemo/radiation –> follicular dysfunction or depletion
- About half have follicles which can function intermittently –> conception
- Present w/ dysfunctional bleeding, oligo or amenorrhea
- Labs - FSH, prolactin, estradiol, thyroid tests and karyotype
- Tx - hormone replacement b/c inc risk bone loss, CVD, cognitive impairment (use until avg age of menopause then treat like anyone else going thru menopause)
6
Q
7 Major Physiological Changes / Symptoms
A
- Skeletal - dec bone mass and inc fracture risk
- Metabolic - inc insulin resistance / central fat
- Cardio - inc total and LDL cholesterol, dec endothelial function, inc risk heart disease
- Neuro - dec memory or cog function (“fog”) and insomnia (can exacerbate)
- GU - vaginal dryness, urinary frequency, urgency, dysuria, vaginal atrophy
- Vasomotor - hot flashes
- Dec Libido - may improve when treat vaginal pain but no association w/ hormone therapy and inc libido
7
Q
Systemic v Local Tx (+ some considerations)
A
- For systemic symptoms … hormone therapy
- Contraindications
- If intact uterus, give w/ progesterone
- Consider using COCs or LNG IUD if still fertile
- Transdermal estrogen has lower clot risk than oral
- For vaginal symptoms … topical estrogen (cream, tablet, ring)
- Can also use SSRI/SNRI if not good hormone candidate- Venlafaxine, escitalopram
- Gabapentin and Clonidine sometimes used
8
Q
Risks v Benefits of Hormone Therapy for Menopause
A
- Risks - clots (1.5 to 2X greater), stroke (1.5 to 2X greater), mixed results for CVD and breast cancer
- Benefits - symptom relief, dec risk osteoporosis and fracture
- DO NOT USE IF ASYMPTOMATIC