Menopause Flashcards

1
Q

what is it

A

cessation of menstruation

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2
Q

What is the average age of menopause

A

51

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3
Q

When is it diagnosed

A

after 12 months of amenorrhoea

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4
Q

whAT IS perimenopause

A

period leading up to menopause characterised by irregular periods and sx e.g. hot flushes, mood swings, urogenital atrophy

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5
Q

What symptoms make up early effects of menopause

A

vasomotor and generalise sx

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6
Q

What are the vasomotor symptoms of menopause? when do they occur? how long do they last
why are they important

A

• hot flushes and night sweats
can begin before periods stop
• Last on average 2-7 years
• Impact on sleep (night sweats), mood and QOL

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7
Q

What are generalised sx?

A

¥ Mood change/irritability
¥ Loss of memory/concentration
¥ Headaches, dry and itchy skin, joint pains
¥ Loss of confidence, lack of energy

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8
Q

What are intermediate effects of menopause

A
vaginal atrophy
urinary problems (frequency, urgency, nocturia, incontinence, recurrent UTIs)
sexual problems (loss of libido, problems w orgasm, dyspareunia)
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9
Q

What problems can vaginal atrophy cause

A

dyspareunia
cessation of sex
itching burning and dryness
PMB (be careful of cancer)

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10
Q

What are late effects of menopause

A

osteoporosis
CV disease
dementia

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11
Q

why is osteoporosis an important effect of the menopause?

A

increases risk of fractures (wrist, Colles’, hip and spine)

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12
Q

What are the ix

give the results expected in menopause and why

A
  1. FSH (2-5 days of cycle) - increased suggests fewer oocytes remaining
  2. AMH - low levels - ovarian failure , gives direct measurement of ovarian reserve as produced by small ovarian follicles
  3. TSH - check for adequate response to HRT
  4. LH, oestradiol + progesterone
  5. Bone density - DEXA (lumbar spine + hip)
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13
Q

What HRT is given in women still w uteruses?why?

A

combined HRT

use of oestrogen only is a major RF for endometrial cancer

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14
Q

What HRT is given for those w/o a uterus

A

oestrogen only therapy

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15
Q

What HRT is given in pre/perimenopausal women

A

oestrogen and cyclical progesterone

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16
Q

What HRT is given in postmenopausal women

A

continuous combined HRT

17
Q

how can progestogens be given

A

Progestogens can be given orally, transdermally and via Mirena

18
Q

when is HRT contraindicated?

A
Oestrogen dependent cancers (endometrial, ovarian, breast)
Past PE
Undiagnosed PV bleeding 
Increased LFT 
Pregnancy 
Breastfeeding 
Phlebitis
19
Q

what are SE of HRT?

A
Fluid retention
Bloating
Breast tenderness
Nausea
Headache
Leg cramps
Dyspepsia
20
Q

What are the risks associated w HRT, which regimens specifically?

A

Breast cancer - combined
Endometrial - oestrogen only
VTE - oral HRT
CVD - increases risk >60

21
Q

What is the duration of therapy ?

A

continue up to 5 yrs then stop to see whether sx recur w sufficient severity to warrant continuation
premature - until median age of natural menopause