Articles Tagged With: Estrogen
-
How Does the Genitourinary Syndrome of Menopause Affect Patients?
This analysis of baseline questionnaire responses from 302 individuals enrolled in the MsFLASH Vaginal Health Trial demonstrated that the most commonly reported symptoms were vaginal dryness (94%), pain with vaginal penetration (84%), vulvovaginal pain and soreness (76%), and vulvovaginal irritation (73%). The symptom most often rated severe was pain with vaginal penetration (40%).
-
Mental Health Screening Needed for Optimal Contraceptive Counseling
Mental health conditions are common among people of reproductive age. Still, both physicians and patients may have misconceptions about using hormonal contraception if patients are diagnosed with depression or other mental health issues. New research suggests that barriers to effective contraceptive use should be addressed, and clinicians need to dispel myths about the negative psychiatric impacts of hormonal contraceptives.
-
Integrating Reproductive History Could Help Postmenopausal Women’s Long-Term Brain Health
Researchers observed patients with higher cumulative estrogen exposure throughout their life may be at lower risk of developing cerebral small vessel disease.
-
The Progestin-Only Pill: How Effective Is It?
In this systematic literature review of 54 studies, the median typical use Pearl Index failure rate was 1.63 (range 0.00 to 14.20) and the median perfect use Pearl Index failure rate was 0.97 (range 0.40 to 6.50).
-
Hormonal Contraceptives Help Women Manage Perimenopause
Women near the end of their reproductive years may experience fewer perimenopausal symptoms if they use a hormonal contraceptive, such as a hormonal intrauterine device.
-
Cumulative Estrogen Exposure Linked to Lower Stroke Risk
These findings could help clinicians sustain their postmenopausal patients’ neurological health.
-
Postmenopausal Estrogen May Prevent Death from COVID-19 Infection
Swedish researchers found taking postmenopausal estrogen was associated with a lower death rate from COVID-19 infection. Taking estrogen suppression therapy for breast cancer was associated with a higher death rate compared with controls.
-
New Oral Contraceptive Holds Promise of Few or No Blood Clots, Other Adverse Effects
Recent research has shown that a new combined oral contraceptive has high efficacy, cycle control, and safety, even among a diverse American population that included women with a body mass index of 35 kg/m2. The medication contains estetrol (a novel estrogen) and drospirenone. -
Estrogen Replacement: Is Long Duration of Therapy Good for the Brain?
Longer lifetime exposure to endogenous estrogen and menopausal estrogen replacement were associated with better cognitive status in older adult women. Women who initiated estrogen therapy early (within five years of the onset of menopause) showed higher cognitive test scores than those who started later.
-
Vaginal Dryness: The Keystone Symptom of Postmenopausal Sexual Dysfunction?
In a large, cross-sectional, multicenter study in Italy that evaluated factors predictive of sexual dysfunction, vaginal dryness correlated independently and negatively with each Female Sexual Function Index domain.