Menopause Resource Center
New
Attitudes Towards Menopause
by Sheryl Weinstein
Imagine a cocktail party conversation in 1966 turning
to menopause. It would have been as unlikely as a female
high school student yearning to be a soccer star.
But times have changed. Just as participating in
sports has now become significant to many young women
so has being open and even activist about menopause
become equally important to their mothers.
The first women of the post-World War II generation
known as baby boomers are reaching the age of 50, one
year away from the average age of menopause among U.S.
women. By the end of this century, more women than
ever before will be experiencing the sometimes uncomfortable
symptoms that accompany the end of menstruation and
natural childbearing capacity.
For
many years, U.S. doctors knew little about and
paid little attention
to menopause. "About 20
years ago, medical attitudes started changing," says
Isaac Schiff, M.D., chief of obstetrics and gynecology,
Massachusetts General Hospital. "We Ob-Gyns used
to think that when women reached age 50, they weren't
interested in sex anymore. But studies in retirement
communities showed otherwise. We also began to see
an increase in the female life expectancy. When a woman
reaches age 50, she typically has another 30 years
to live. As physicians, we became interested not only
in the quantity of her life, but the quality of it."
The
pace of medical inquiry has accelerated over the
last few years,
as the first of the baby boomers
started experiencing menopausal symptoms. "It's
not uncommon to hear it discussed at cocktail parties," says
Schiff. "This is a radical turn-around from the
way the mothers of these women treated it. Speak to
a 50-year-old woman and she'll say, my mother never
discussed it with me."
With such thinking, a new attitude toward treatment
and research has emerged, says Schiff. Until recently,
there were few studies on menopause. One of the largest
and potentially most fruitful is the Women's Health
Initiative, sponsored by the National Institutes of
Health, which will study 164,500 women of various racial
and ethnic backgrounds across the United States. The
scientific investigation, which will not be completed
until 2005, is expected to find out whether a low-fat
diet, hormone replacement therapy, calcium, and vitamin
D might prevent heart disease, breast and colorectal
cancers, bone fractures, and memory loss.
Hormone Replacement Therapy
As
many as 15 to 25 percent of postmenopausal American
women take hormone
replacement therapy, according to
an article in the January 1995 issue of the Journal
of Obstetrics and Gynecology by Diane Wysowski, Ph.D.,
of the Food and Drug Administration, and colleagues.
Women take estrogen to alleviate menopausal symptoms,
especially hot flashes (sometimes called by doctors "hot
flushes"), and also to protect bones.
Since
the 1940s, FDA has approved many estrogen drugs to
reduce menopausal
symptoms. In the 1980s, FDA also
began approving specific estrogen drugs to prevent
osteoporosis (literally "porous bones," a
condition in which bones break easily). The agency
has approved four estrogen drugs--Premarin, Estraderm,
Estrace, and Ogen--for long-term use to prevent osteoporosis.
Other approved uses for estrogen drugs include the
treatment of symptoms of vaginal atrophy, which may
include itching, burning or dryness around the vagina,
certain abnormal uterine bleeding conditions due to
hormonal imbalance, and the comfort-promoting treatment
of certain advanced cancers.
Many scientists believe that estrogen may fight heart
disease by lowering harmful cholesterol (LDL), raising
beneficial cholesterol (HDL), and strengthening the
lining of the blood vessels, but this has not been
clearly proven. Some research also suggests that estrogen
may help prevent memory loss and Alzheimer's disease,
but the scientific evidence remains speculative.
Nearly
all the studies on heart disease and cognitive function
have been
retrospective or "look back" studies.
The Women's Health Initiative Study will be prospective,
that is, future-oriented, says Deborah Smith, M.D.,
a medical adviser in FDA's Office of Women's Health.
Researchers will select a group of generally healthy
women to treat and observe for a number of years to
see if, and at what rate, they develop symptoms. Elements
of the study will be scientifically controlled and
data freshly recorded. Most important, treated and
untreated women will be equally healthy at the start
of the study. Retrospective studies depend on information
sometimes clouded by time and memory loss, and women
selected by their doctors for hormone replacement have
usually been healthier than the women not so prescribed.
"The other important difference about the Women's
Health Initiative is that it includes a clinical trial
of estrogen," says Jacques Rossouw, the lead project
officer for the study. "Participants will have
an equal chance of being on either estrogen or a placebo,
and any differences in their health at the study's
end can be ascribed to the estrogen."
Risks of Estrogen Therapy
Estrogen is most commonly prescribed in pill form.
It is also available in transdermal patches, which
allow the drug to be slowly absorbed into the bloodstream,
in vaginal creams, which treat localized discomforts.
Estrogen
replacement therapy is not risk-free. "There's
been much experimental evidence and patient experience
showing estrogen given alone can lead to endometrial
cancer," says FDA's Smith. For that reason, a
woman who still has a uterus is usually prescribed
progestin in addition to estrogen. This significantly
reduces the risk of abnormal changes in the uterine
lining.
Endometrial cancer is not the only risk from estrogen
use. Gallbladder disease is another. Women who use
estrogens after menopause are more likely to develop
gallbladder disease needing surgery than women who
don't use estrogens.
The drug's labeling also includes warning about abnormal
blood clotting. Clots can cause a stroke, heart attack,
or pulmonary embolus, any of which can be fatal.
Estrogen can produce uncomfortable side effects such
as nausea and vomiting. It can enlarge breasts and
make them tender. Women who use it can also retain
excess fluid, which can aggravate conditions like asthma,
epilepsy, migraines, and heart and kidney disease.
A spotty darkening of the skin, particularly on the
face, can occur.
For women who take progestin along with estrogen,
menstrual-like bleeding and premenstrual symptoms often
occur. Also under study is whether adding progestin
counters the potential heart-protective effects of
estrogen.
It
is not known whether estrogen use increases the risk
of breast cancer,
or what effect adding progestin
would have on this risk. In recent years, many studies
on breast cancer and estrogen use have been conducted,
with conflicting results, says Smith. Following the
publication in June 1995 of opposing views in two of
the nation's most prestigious medical journals, the
New England Journal of Medicine and the Journal of
the American Medical Association, NIH scientists advised
women to consult their "medical caregiver for
advice that is based on the individual's own personal
health profile." Physicians urge women who receive
estrogen therapy to have regular breast examinations
by a health professional, perform monthly self-exams,
and have yearly mammograms starting at intervals recommended
by their doctors.
Before Menopause
The
medical term for the usually gradual period of change
leading into
natural menopause is "perimenopause." The
two to three years following the last period are called
the "climacteric." According to the American
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the average
age of menopause in the United States is around age
51. But some women go through natural menopause as
early as age 35, while others don't experience it until
their late 50s. Menopause occurs at any age with surgical
removal of the ovaries.
During
perimenopause, estrogen production is low and the ovaries
stop producing
eggs. As estrogen levels
decline, certain signs may appear. The most common
sign, the one that doctors sometimes call the "hallmark" of
menopause, is the hot flash. A hot flash is a sudden
rush of heat to the neck, face, and possibly other
parts of the body that may last from 30 seconds to
five minutes. Some women go from feeling hot to feeling
cold. The hot flash may begin with a sudden tingling
in the fingers, toes, cheeks, or ears.
Some
people used to think the hot flash didn't exist, that
it was "all in a woman's head," says Smith.
Ironically, it is in a woman's head--but it has a
very real physical cause. The hot flash is an alteration
in thermal stability, which is maintained by the hypothalamus,
a brain region located above the pituitary gland on
the brain's floor. The hypothalamus operates the body's
temperature regulation system. Estrogen levels manipulate
some functions of the hypothalamus. During menopause,
as the ovaries produce less estrogen, the hypothalamus
senses and responds to the lower estrogen levels by
rapidly changing body temperature. The result may be
a hot flash.
Perspiration, sometimes extreme sweating, can accompany
hot flashes. Many of them typically occur in the middle
of the night, which causes some women to have trouble
falling back to sleep. How many women are affected
by hot flashes has not been clearly determined, and
the reported numbers depend in part on whether healthy
populations or women in medical settings are surveyed.
Some scientists say as few as 30 percent of women are
afflicted by them; others believe the figure is much
higher.
According to Morris Notelovitz, M.D., Ph.D., and
colleagues in the text Menopause in Midlife Health,
85 percent of perimenopausal women experience hot flashes.
Fifty-four percent of the women experience them in
their climacteric years; 25 percent of these women
experience hot flashes up to 10 years after the climacteric.
About 10 percent of the women who continue to have
hot flashes still have them for 10 years after the
climacteric, according to Notelovitz.
Obese women are less likely to have hot flashes because
they have more estrogen, which is converted from adrenal
hormones by stored fat. Many women cope with hot flashes
by trying to relax until the discomfort passes and
by lowering the room temperature, dressing in light
layers of clothing, avoiding spicy food, and cutting
back on caffeine and alcohol.
Vaginal dryness is another symptom of estrogen decrease
and may lead to painful intercourse, vaginal infections,
and urinary problems. Over-the-counter vaginal lubricants
(Replens and others) may help. Prescription estrogen
replacement creams are approved by FDA to relieve these
symptoms.
Other symptoms attributed to menopause include difficulty
concentrating, depression, headache, memory loss, a
feeling of insects crawling across the skin, and lower
backaches, which may be related to osteoporosis.
Barbara Sherwin, Ph.D., at the University of Toronto,
and colleagues have been researching an association
between menopause and memory loss, even Alzheimer's
disease, and whether estrogen can halt these problems.
Sally Shumaker, Ph.D., of the Bowman-Gray School of
Medicine, North Carolina, is leading a $16 million
study, the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study,
to determine whether estrogen treatment affects a woman's
risk of developing dementia after age 65. Wyeth-Ayerst
Laboratories is funding the study.
Probably the disease with the strongest link to menopause
is osteoporosis. Scientists believe women can help
control bone loss with weight-bearing exercises, including
walking, running or weightlifting. A low-fat diet,
rich in calcium and vitamin D, is also believed to
be important, as are cutting back on alcohol and stopping
smoking. FDA has approved a nonhormonal drug to treat
osteoporosis. (See "Boning
Up on Osteoporosis" in the September 1996
FDA Consumer.)
Despite
its sometimes annoying, peripheral problems, more than
ever before
menopause is now seen as a natural
process, not a disease. "There's nothing embarrassing
about it," says Schiff. "It's healthy. It's
physiologic."
It is such new thinking that best explains why at
cocktail parties and other places baby boomers congregate
that menopause is a hot conversation topic.
Sheryl
Weinstein is a writer in Livingston, N.J.
article
syndicated from U.S.
Food and Drug Administration:
http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/1997/297_meno.html
FDA Consumer Magazine, March 1997
Publication No. (FDA) 98-1289
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