Literature DB >> 15974959

Management of the menopausal disturbances and oxidative stress.

Francesco Pansini1, Gioacchino Mollica, Carlo M Bergamini.   

Abstract

Women frequently seek gynaecologic medical advice at menopause and require pharmacologic interventions to control subjective vasomotor complaints and to prevent late severe organic complications, which may effect the genitourinary tract, the skeletal, the cardiovascular and the nervous system. Depending on the severity of the presentation and the involvement of additional systems beyond the reproductive tract, physicians have several distinct therapies available, which should be carefully evaluated and administered in a "patient-personalised" fashion: they include organ-oriented drugs, available for selective treatment in patients which do not display major direct endocrine symptoms, as well as endocrine therapies (administration of native estrogens; or synthetic selective hormonal drugs, i.e. SERMs and SEEMs). Much interest is now focusing on new kinds of plant estrogen-like compounds, mostly isoflavones, which by one hand display estrogen-like (or antagonistic) effects, by the other are powerful antioxidising agents. In our survey, we discuss extensively the enormous amount of data available in the literature, underlining by one side that most of the formulations currently in use for the overall therapy of menopausal complaints have structure features also characteristic of antioxidising agents, by the other that there are wide evidences of increased oxidative damage occurs in women during the postmenopausal life. These observations suggest the possibility of a contribution of antioxidising activity of the administered drugs to the beneficial clinical effects on the patients, in agreement with the demonstrated estrogen intrinsic antioxidising activity in vitro. This stresses the requirement of further basic and clinical studies on the relevance of oxidative damage during postmenopausal female life.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15974959     DOI: 10.2174/1381612054065819

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Pharm Des        ISSN: 1381-6128            Impact factor:   3.116


  6 in total

1.  N-acetylcysteine prevents orchiectomy-induced osteoporosis by inhibiting oxidative stress and osteocyte senescence.

Authors:  Lulu Chen; Guantong Wang; Qinjue Wang; Quan Liu; Qiang Sun; Lulu Chen
Journal:  Am J Transl Res       Date:  2019-07-15       Impact factor: 4.060

2.  Correlation between bone mineral density and oxidative stress in postmenopausal women.

Authors:  Tripti Sharma; Najmul Islam; Jamal Ahmad; Nishat Akhtar; Mujahid Beg
Journal:  Indian J Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2015 Jul-Aug

3.  Single-Nucleotide Polymorphisms and Markers of Oxidative Stress in Healthy Women.

Authors:  Albina N Minlikeeva; Richard W Browne; Heather M Ochs-Balcom; Catalin Marian; Peter G Shields; Maurizio Trevisan; Shiva Krishnan; Ramakrishna Modali; Michael Seddon; Teresa Lehman; Jo L Freudenheim
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-06-07       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Quality of life among post-menopausal women due to oxidative stress boosted by dysthymia and anxiety.

Authors:  Martha A Sánchez-Rodríguez; Lizett Castrejón-Delgado; Mariano Zacarías-Flores; Alicia Arronte-Rosales; Víctor Manuel Mendoza-Núñez
Journal:  BMC Womens Health       Date:  2017-01-03       Impact factor: 2.809

5.  Circulatory Levels of RANKL, OPG, and Oxidative Stress Markers in Postmenopausal Women With Normal or Low Bone Mineral Density.

Authors:  Fawaz Y Azizieh; Diaa Shehab; Khaled Al Jarallah; Renu Gupta; Raj Raghupathy
Journal:  Biomark Insights       Date:  2019-08-19

Review 6.  Oxidative stress as a possible pathogenic cofactor of post-menopausal osteoporosis: Existing evidence in support of the axis oestrogen deficiency-redox imbalance-bone loss.

Authors:  Gloria Bonaccorsi; Isabella Piva; Pantaleo Greco; Carlo Cervellati
Journal:  Indian J Med Res       Date:  2018-04       Impact factor: 2.375

  6 in total

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