The Asian Age

Early menopause a heart risk?

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London: Women who go through menopause early - at ages 40 to 45 - have a higher rate of heart failure, according to a new study.

Smoking, current or past, can increase the risk, said researcher­s from the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden.

The study is the first large- scale ( including more than 22,000 postmenopa­usal women) and long- term study linking early menopause and heart disease. xIt was made possible by the Swedish National Patient Register, which cap- tures nearly all Sweden’s hospitalis­ation and outpatient diagnoses; Sweden’s Cause of Death Register and health surveys of some 90,000 women in the Swedish Mammograph­y Cohort, researcher­s said.

The authors’ analysis of the data showed that women who went through menopause naturally at an early age had a rate of heart failure some 40 per cent higher than women who went through menopause the usual age between 50 and 54. For every one- year increase in age at menopause, the rate of heart failure was 2 per cent lower.

Smokers are known to go through menopause an average of one year earlier than nonsmokers, but that didn’t entirely explain the early menopause- heart failure connection, since women who had smoked earlier in their lives and quit also had an increased rate of heart failure with early menopause, researcher­s said.

Women who smoked, even if they had quit earlier, had a much higher risk of heart failure if they went through with menopause only somewhat early — at ages 46 to 49. The study was published in Menopause, the journal of The North American Menopause Society ( NAMS). — PTI

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