Women may experience menopause-like symptoms before menopause transition in their late-reproductive years
Study of Spanish-speaking women not only adds to the evidence that women experience multiple symptoms typically associated with the menopause transition in their late-reproductive years
USA: A recent study published in the journal Menopause suggests that women may experience menopause-like symptoms several years before menopause, during the late-reproductive stage.
The menopause transition is often accompanied by several symptoms that can affect a woman's overall quality of life, including hot flashes, sleep disturbances, and depression.
By 2025, an estimated 1.1 billion women worldwide will be postmenopausal. Yet, the number of women experiencing menopause-like symptoms will likely be much higher because there is growing evidence to suggest that women in the late-reproductive stage experience multiple symptoms often associated with menopause years before the official menopause transition. A new study involving more than 350 Spanish-speaking respondents is the latest to document the effect of various physiologic and psychosocial changes that affect women in the 4 to 10 years preceding the final menstrual period.
Low antral follicle counts and subtle changes to menstrual cycle length, duration, and flow characterize a woman's late-reproductive stage. It typically marks when fertility begins to decline and hormone patterns begin to change. This study sought to characterize and compare the symptoms Spanish-speaking women worldwide report experiencing during the late-reproductive stage and the menopause transition.
The new study identified a similar proportion of women in the late-reproductive stage and the menopause transition reporting 8 of 18 common menopause symptoms. Among other findings, women in the late-reproductive stage had lower age-adjusted odds of musculoskeletal pain and lower odds of decreased interest in sex. But both groups reported a similar interference with personal relationships and overall quality of life. Additional analyses are needed to assess how changes associated with reproductive ageing affect the quality of life.
Study results are published in the article "Symptom experience during the late reproductive stage versus the menopausal transition in the Spanish-language Women Living Better survey."
"This study in Spanish-speaking women not only adds to the evidence that women experience multiple symptoms typically associated with the menopause transition in their late-reproductive years but also highlights opportunities for anticipatory guidance that is culturally and linguistically appropriate," says Dr. Stephanie Faubion, NAMS medical director.
Reference:
Cortés, Yamnia I. PhD, MPH, FNP-BC1; Coslov, Nina BA, MBA2; Richardson, Marcie K. MD3; Woods, Nancy Fugate PhD, RN, FAAN4. Symptom experience during the late reproductive stage versus the menopausal transition in the Spanish-language Women Living Better survey. Menopause ():10.1097/GME.0000000000002132, January 10, 2023. | DOI: 10.1097/GME.0000000000002132
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