1,721,085 research outputs found
Menopause and Sexual Health: Hormones, Aging or Both?
: Sexual health is multidimensional across the lifespan. At midlife, women may face challenges to sexuality, often requiring intervention. Menopause-related and age-related hormonal changes intermingle with common medical conditions and contribute to biological substrates less favorable to a healthy sexual response. Psychological, sociocultural, and relational factors modulate the impact of such changes positively or negatively, contributing to adaptation or manifestation of sexually related distress. A comprehensive diagnostic approach and multidimensional management are needed to address sexual symptoms due to both menopause and aging, individualizing non-pharmacological and pharmacological evidence-based treatment options according to personal goals and expectations in the woman/couple
Recent advances in understanding/management of premenstrual dysphoric disorder/premenstrual syndrome
Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) are common disorders of the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle and are characterized by moderate to severe physical, affective, or behavioral symptoms that impair daily activities and quality of life. PMS and PMDD have recently raised great interest in the research community for their considerable global prevalence. The etiology of PMS/PMDD is complex. Ovarian reproductive steroids (estradiol and progesterone) are considered pathogenetic effectors, but the key feature seems to be an altered sensitivity of the GABAergic central inhibitory system to allopregnanolone, a neurosteroid derived from progesterone produced after ovulation. Also, a reduced availability of serotonin seems to be involved. New insights point to a role for genetic and epigenetic modifications of hormonal and neurotransmitter pathways, and inflammation is the potential link between peripheral and neurological integrated responses to stressors. Thus, new therapeutic approaches to PMS/PMDD include inhibition of progesterone receptors in the brain (i.e., with ulipristal acetate), reduced conversion of progesterone to its metabolite allopregnanolone with dutasteride, and possible modulation of the action of allopregnanolone on the brain GABAergic system with sepranolone. Further research is needed to better understand the interaction between peripheral inflammatory molecules (cytokines, interleukins, C-reactive protein, and reactive oxygen species) and the brain neurotransmitter systems in women with PMS/PMDD. If confirmed, neuroinflammation could lead both to develop targeted anti-inflammatory therapies and to define prevention strategies for the associated chronic inflammatory risk in PMS/PMDD. Finally, the observed association between premenstrual disorders and psychological diseases may guide prompt and adequate interventions to achieve a better quality of life
The 2022 hormone therapy position statement of The North American Menopause Society: no news is good news
Oral Contraceptives for Menstrual Migraine with Aura
This feature about a woman who has migraines with aura, usually occurring around the time of her menses, offers a case vignette accompanied by two essays, one supporting prescription of oral combined contraceptive pills and the other recommending against it
- …
