| Literature DB >> 30766705 |
Ayelet Ziv-Gal1, Rebecca L Smith2, Lisa Gallicchio3, Susan R Miller4, Howard A Zacur4, Jodi A Flaws5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Midlife Women's Health Study (MWHS) was developed to address some of the gaps in knowledge regarding risk factors for hot flashes among generally healthy midlife women during their menopausal transition. This manuscript describes the methods from the study and the main findings that were published to date, with a focus on predictors of hot flashes. This study was initially funded to test the hypothesis that obesity is associated with an increased risk of hot flashes through mechanisms that involve ovarian failure, altered sex steroid hormone levels, and selected genetic polymorphisms. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: BMI; Cigarette smoking; Hot flash; Menopausal transition; Race; Study protocol
Year: 2017 PMID: 30766705 PMCID: PMC6300019 DOI: 10.1186/s40695-017-0024-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Womens Midlife Health ISSN: 2054-2690
Fig. 1The MWHS study was designed to test the hypothesis that obesity is associated with hot flashes through: a) early ovarian follicle loss/failure, b) selected genetic polymorphisms in the genes that encode enzymes that synthesize and degrade sex steroids and/or the receptors that allow tissues to respond to sex steroids, or c) mechanisms involving early follicle loss/failure, altered sex steroid hormone levels, and genetic polymorphisms in genes that encode enzymes that synthesize and degrade sex steroids and/or receptors that respond to sex steroids (this part of the study is yet to be conducted)
Fig. 2Potential participants in the MWHS were screened for eligibility based on the described selection algorithm. Specifically, women between the ages of 45 and 54 years, with an intact uteri and both ovaries, not pregnant, who have not had cancer, who have had their last menstrual period within the last 12 month period, but not within the last 3 month period, and who have not used hormone replacement therapy, herbal or plant substances for treatment of hot flashes were eligible for the MWHS
Fig. 3A flow chart describing the number of participants during the initial recruitment and the number of active participants per year