Menopause - Complications

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Blood pressure
Blood pressure is the force applied against the walls of the arteries as the heart pumps blood through the body. The pressure is determined by the force and amount of blood pumped and the size and flexibility of the arteries.
  • Mixed Effects on Blood Clotting. Estrogen affects many blood-clotting factors in the liver: It reduces blood viscosity (stickiness) and may enhance fibrinolysis, the natural process for breaking down blood clots. Unfortunately, estrogen also has other actions that increase the risk for blood clots. Women who take hormone replacement therapy are at risk for thromboembolism -- blood clots that block a vessel.
Click the icon to see an image of thromboembolism.
  • This action may explain the higher rates of adverse heart events now observed in women with heart disease who take HRT.

Menopause and Bone Density

Osteoporosis is a disease of the skeleton in which bones become brittle and prone to fracture. In other words, the bone loses density. At age 65, about 30% of women have osteoporosis, and nearly all of them are unaware of their condition. After age 80, up to 70% of women develop osteoporosis. Osteoporosis is a major risk factor for fracture in the spine and hip. The lifetime risk of spinal fracture in women is about 1 in 3 and that for hip fracture is 1 in 6. Furthermore, between 10 - 20% of women who experience a hip fracture die within a year and about 25% require nursing home treatment.

Osteoporosis Click the icon to see an image of osteoporosis.

Experts are still puzzled by the extreme speed-up of bone breakdown (resorption) after menopause. Estrogen may have an impact on bone density in various ways:

  • Estrogen's most important effect on osteoporosis appears to be prevention of bone break down (resorption). Some research suggests that estrogen may control the life span of osteoclasts, the cells responsible for bone breakdown.
  • Part of estrogen's beneficial actions may involve maintaining normal levels of vitamin D, an important nutrient in bone protection.

Risk factors for osteoporosis include:

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