| Literature DB >> 31416275 |
Cristina Secoșan1, Oana Balint2, Laurențiu Pirtea1, Dorin Grigoraș1, Ligia Bălulescu3, Răzvan Ilina4.
Abstract
Menopause can occur spontaneously (natural menopause) or it can be surgically induced by oophorectomy. The symptoms and complications related to menopause differ from one patient to another. We aimed to review the similarities and differences between natural and surgically induced menopause by analyzing the available data in literature regarding surgically induced menopause and the current guidelines and recommendations, the advantages of bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy in low and high risk patients, the effects of surgically induced menopause and to analyze the factors involved in decision making.Entities:
Keywords: complications; menopause; oophorectomy; salpingectomy; surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31416275 PMCID: PMC6722518 DOI: 10.3390/medicina55080482
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Bilateral salpingectomy with ovarian retention (BSOR).
| The Advantages of Salpingectomy | The Disadvantages of Salpingectomy |
|---|---|
| 1. Removing a proportion of the risk of women with BRCA 1/2 mutations that refuse BSO before menopause. Postponing a premature menopause | 1. The incidence rate of tubal origin of ovarian cancer is not known accurately. |
| 2. Postponing a premature menopause | 2. The mechanism by which tubal ligation mediates risk reduction is not known; the benefit is strictly related to the reduction of the risk of tubal cancer or also affects the risk of primary ovarian / peritoneal cancer. |
| 3. The possibility of performing a laparoscopic procedure almost in all cases; the opportunity of peritoneal cavity inspection and peritoneal biopsy. | 3. Personally postponing BO after BSOP for a long time, increasing the cumulative risk of ovarian cancer. |
| 4. Provides the possibility of fertility preservation through assisted techniques. | 4. The difficulty of making the right decision for the use of BSOP due to the risk differences between BRCA 1 and BRCA 2 in women aged 30–50 years; with a mean age at diagnosis 51,2 years for BRCA 1 and 57,2 for BRCA 2; there is a tendency for delayed BSOR for BRCA 2. |
| 5. Easier procedure to accept for women who do not want BOS for psychological reasons. | 5. Reducing the risk of breast cancer by postponing BO; the maximum reduction in breast cancer risk was observed when performing BO before natural menopause |
| 6. Increasing the risk of surgical complications at BO because it becomes a reintervention. |
The effects of surgically induced menopause.
| The Effects of Surgically Induced Menopause | |
|---|---|
| global survival | - the mortality risk increases in patients with bilateral oophorectomy under 45–50 years of age without hormone replacement therapy (HRT) |
| cardiovascular disease | - 40% increased risk for cardiovascular disease in women with oophorectomy without hormone replacement therapy (HRT) regardless of age |
| cognitive function | - increased risk of cognitive impairment, dementia or Parkinsonism and Alzheimer’s disease |
| sexual function | - negative consequences on sexual function in women with oophorectomy without HRT, such as: decreased libido and difficult sexual arousal, a 3-fold risk of anorgasmia; increased risk of hypoactive sexual desire disorder |
| bone loss | - bilateral oophorectomy in women under 45 years of age is considered a risk factor for osteoporosis |