Ottawa Citizen

Earlier menopause may increase cardiovasc­ular risks, study finds

- LINDA SEARING

Reaching menopause before age 50 may increase your chances of developing cardiovasc­ular disease, a new study suggests.

For instance, the researcher­s found that women who reached menopause when they were 40 to 44 years old were 40 per cent more likely to have a nonfatal cardiovasc­ular problem, such as angina, a heart attack or stroke, before age 60 than were women who reached menopause at age 50 or 51. Reaching menopause at 45 to 49 correspond­ed to a 17 per cent increased risk.

The findings, published in the Lancet: Public Health, are based on an analysis of data from 15 studies, involving 301,438 women in the United States, Britain, Australia, Japan and Scandinavi­a, spanning nearly 70 years.

Menopause, when a woman has not had a menstrual period for 12 months, is a normal part of aging and, on average, occurs at age 51. The study did not determine why cardiovasc­ular problems were more prevalent among women who experience­d menopause before age 50, but it noted that the drop in estrogen levels that accompanie­s menopause may play a role in this.

Heart disease is the leading cause of death for women in the United States, accounting for one in five deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But the American Heart Associatio­n points out that menopause does not cause cardiovasc­ular disease. Rather, it says, certain risk factors increase at this stage of a woman’s life.

The Washington Post

 ?? GETTY/ISTOCK PHOTO ?? The chances of having cardiovasc­ular problems increase in women who hit menopause before the age of 50, a new study has revealed.
GETTY/ISTOCK PHOTO The chances of having cardiovasc­ular problems increase in women who hit menopause before the age of 50, a new study has revealed.

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