"...women should be made aware that their cardiovascular health is likely to worsen as they go through menopause," says epidemiologist Samar R. El Khoudary. (Credit: Getty Images )

Heart disease risk grows during menopause

"Women should be made aware that their cardiovascular health is likely to worsen as they go through menopause."

Allison Hydzik-Pittsburgh • futurity
Feb. 3, 2020 5 minSource

older woman lays hands on chest

A marker for heart disease risk considerably worsens as women transition through menopause, a new study shows.

Black women experience the accelerated decline earlier than white women do, researchers say.

The new analysis, which comes from the largest and longest running study of women’s health in midlife, the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN), adds to growing evidence that menopause is a critical time for changes in cardiovascular health, researchers say.

The findings underscore the importance of women and their doctors focusing on heart health during the menopausal transition.

“Midlife is not just a period where women have hot flashes and experience other menopausal symptoms,” says Samar R. El Khoudary, associate professor of epidemiology at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health and senior author of the paper in Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology.

“It’s a time when their cardiovascular disease risk is increasing as we see significant changes in multiple clinical measures of their physical health.”

El Khoudary and her team used a subset of data from SWAN Heart, an ancillary study that enrolled women from Pittsburgh and Chicago between 2001 and 2003 and included two examinations of early markers of cardiovascular health over time. Ultimately, the study included 339 women, 36% black and the rest white.

Stiffer arteries during menopause

The study focused on how arterial stiffness changes as women transition through menopause. Arterial stiffness refers to the elasticity of arteries and is measured by looking at how fast blood flows through arteries. Stiffer arteries can lead to dysfunction in how well the heart pumps and moves blood, and damage to the heart, kidneys and other organs.

The researchers tracked the women through SWAN for up to 12.5 years, or until they reached menopause, allowing them to confidently anchor the arterial stiffness measure to the menopausal transition.

On average, as women went through menopause, their arterial stiffness increased by about 0.9% up to one year before their last menstrual period to about 7.5% within one year before and after their last period, a considerable acceleration. The black women in the study experienced greater increases in arterial stiffness earlier in the transition than white women, more than a year before menopause. The findings held after adjusting for numerous factors that could affect heart health, including waist circumference, blood pressure, lipids, smoking status, physical activity levels, and financial stress.

Why the heart disease risk?

“SWAN is a unique source of data on changes in women’s health over several decades, and this is the latest in a long line of research by our team and others that indicates the menopausal transition is a very important time for heart health,” says lead author Saad Samargandy, a PhD student at Pitt Public Health. “While there are limitations to our study, including that a sizable minority of the women had their arterial stiffness measured at only one time point, we were still able to see that major changes to cardiovascular disease risk happen around menopause.”

This study follows several others that link the menopausal transition to the accumulation of heart fat, changes in cholesterol, inflammation, and coronary artery calcification, among other heart disease risk factors, the researchers say.

“Our study is not able to tell us why we’re seeing these changes during the menopausal transition,” El Khoudary says. “But we speculate that the dramatic hormonal changes accompanying menopause might play a role by increasing inflammation and affecting vascular fat deposition, a hypothesis that we would like to test in future studies.”

Researchers will need to conduct clinical trials to test if lifestyle interventions, such as changes to diet or physical activity; medications, such as statins or hormone replacement therapy; or even increased screening and tracking of measures of heart health could benefit women as they go through menopause, Khoudary says.

“But we can say, right now, that women should be made aware that their cardiovascular health is likely to worsen as they go through menopause. Therefore, frequent monitoring of cardiovascular risk factors may be prudent, particularly in black women who are at even greater risk earlier in the menopausal transition.”

Additional authors are from Rush University, Cooper University Hospital, and the University of Pittsburgh. The National Institutes of Health funded the work.

Source: University of Pittsburgh

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