| Race,
weight, smoking tied to menopause symptoms
African-American
women are more likely than other racial groups to suffer frequent
hot flashes and night sweats throughout the years leading to menopause,
new research suggests!
Tuesday,
July 11, 2006 - CNN
NEW YORK (Reuters)
-- The study, which followed
nearly 3,200 U.S. women for seven years, found that black women
had the highest rates of so-called vasomotor symptoms -- hot flashes,
night sweats and cold sweats -- while women of Asian descent had
the lowest rates.
The racial differences persisted
throughout perimenopause, the years during which a woman's menstrual
periods gradually diminish before stopping completely.
However, women of all races did
show some similarities. In general, hot flashes and other vasomotor
symptoms were most common in the late perimenopause stage, regardless
of a woman's race, said lead study author Dr. Ellen B. Gold of the
University of California, Davis.
Late perimenopause is the point
soon before menopause, when a woman goes several months between
periods. In this study, the percentage of women reporting frequent
vasomotor symptoms jumped during the transition from early to late
perimenopause, with the same pattern seen in black, white, Hispanic
and Asian women.
The findings are published in the
July issue of the American Journal of Public Health.
The study included 3,198 U.S. women
ages 42 to 52 who were followed from 1996 through 2002. During that
time, the percentage of women reporting frequent hot flashes and
sweats climbed from 11 percent to 21 percent -- "frequent"
being defined as six or more days in the past two weeks.
Compared with white women, black
women were 63 percent more likely to have frequent symptoms, whereas
the risk was lower among women of Chinese, Japanese or Hispanic
descent.
The reasons for these racial differences
are still unknown, Gold told Reuters Health, and ongoing research
is aimed at answering the question.
But the current study also found
some other risk factors that, unlike race and stage of menopause,
can be changed. In general, women who were overweight were at greater
risk of frequent vasomotor symptoms, as were smokers.
The implication, Gold said, is that
maintaining a healthy weight and not smoking could help prevent
symptoms. "These are two things women can do something about
on their own," she said.
"There are lots
of good reasons not to smoke," Gold added, "and this could
be another one."
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