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Early menopause and its determinants

Journal of Biosocial Science, 1982
SummaryIn rural women in Andhra Pradesh, major determinants of early menopause are poor health status, particularly low haemoglobin and protein levels, increased parity, and pathological conditions including infection by bacteria, fungi and viruses. Early menopause leads to increased likelihood of extramarital sexual relations by husbands, resulting in
K, Mahadevan   +3 more
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Factors associated with early menopause

Maturitas, 2000
An understanding of why certain factors contribute to a more rapid decline in ovarian function may, for some women, help prevent premature loss of fecundity and the subsequent impact of health problems secondary to long-term estrogen deficiency such as osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, and possibly Alzheimer's disease.A summary of the evidence ...
B L, Harlow, L B, Signorello
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Premature ovarian insufficiency, early menopause, and induced menopause

Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) is a condition in which there is a decline in ovarian function in women who are younger than 40 years resulting in a hypo-oestrogenic state with elevated gonadotrophins and oligomenorrhoea/amenorrhoea. This leads to short term complications of menopausal symptoms and long-term effects on bone and cardiovascular ...
Haitham, Hamoda, Angela, Sharma
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Early Menopause: Primary Ovarian Insufficiency and Surgical Menopause

Seminars in Reproductive Medicine, 2010
Early menopause, whether a consequence of primary ovarian insufficiency or resulting from surgical removal of gonads in a premenopausal woman, offers unique health-related challenges. Premature deprivation of sex steroids sets into motion a cascade of events that preferentially target urogenital, skeletal, cardiovascular, and neurocognitive systems ...
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[Early menopause].

Journal de gynecologie, obstetrique et biologie de la reproduction, 1997
Early menopause due to an exhaustion of the ovarian follicles before the age of 40 years occurs in approximately 1% of women in this age range. Clinical signs of estrogen deficiency with amenorrhea and sterility are usually confirmed by hypergonadotrope hypogonadism at laboratory tests. The syndrome is to be differentiated from gonadotrophine resistant
Y, Aubard   +4 more
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Optimising health after early menopause

The Lancet
The typical age at menopause is 50-51 years in high-income countries. However, early menopause is common, with around 8% of women in high-income countries and 12% of women globally experiencing menopause between the ages of 40 years and 44 years. Menopause before age 40 years (premature ovarian insufficiency) affects an additional 2-4% of women.
Gita D, Mishra   +6 more
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Clinical Effects of Early or Surgical Menopause

Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2020
Increasing numbers of women experience early menopause due in part to surgical treatment for benign gynecologic disorders and the rise in risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy in women with BRCA mutations. Unfortunately, the adverse health consequences of early loss of ovarian function accelerate the menopausal state and affect multiple systems,
Sheryl A, Kingsberg   +2 more
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