Saturday 7 March 2015

Early Onset Hot Flashes May Point to Raised Heart Disease Risk

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Studies found that the daily frequency of episodes seemed to matter, too


WebMD News from HealthDay

By Robert Preidt

HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, March 3, 2015 (HealthDay News) -- Women who start having hot flashes at a younger age may be at increased risk for heart disease, according to two studies conducted by the same team of researchers.

One of the studies also found that women who have more frequent hot flashes during a typical day may be at raised heart risk.

Led by Rebecca Thurston, of the University of Pittsburgh, the studies found that women who begin experiencing hot flashes earlier in life appear to have poorer function of the lining of the blood vessels than those who have hot flashes at a later age, or not at all.

Impaired function in the blood vessel's walls -- called reduced endothelial function -- is the earliest sign of heart disease, the researchers noted.

"Hot flashes occur at a time in a woman's life when her risk for heart disease increases," said Thurston, who is an associate professor of psychiatry, psychology and epidemiology at the university. The new findings suggest that earlier onset of hot flashes may help doctors spot women who are at greater risk for heart disease, she said.

In one study, 189 women either in or just out of menopause wore a special monitor for 24 hours to track the frequency of their hot flashes. Their blood vessel health was checked via ultrasound tests to arteries in the forearm.

The study found that more hot flashes in that 24-hour period were linked to worse blood flow in younger women -- those aged 52 or younger.

The number of hot flashes per day also seemed key. Women who experienced 10 or more episodes per day had a 50 percent reduction in how well their vessels expanded during normal blood flow, compared to women without any hot flashes, the researchers said.

The second study drew on questionnaires given to 104 older women in the postmenopausal stage who already had signs of heart disease. It found that women who said they experienced their first hot flash when young (age 42 or below) had significantly worse blood vessel health than those whose hot flashes started later in life. The finding held even after the researchers accounted for age, hormone use and history of heart disease, the team said.



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