After Menopause, Women Have Higher Risk of Metabolic Syndrome

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Some women who manage to maintain a healthy weight and have “good” numbers for their blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood sugar for most of their life may find this is no longer the case after they reach menopause. A study published in June 2020 in the journal Menopause suggests that their chance of developing so-called metabolic syndrome, when many of these things are too high, climbs as much as 38 percent after menopause.

Researchers examined data on 12,611 Canadian women ranging in age from 45 to 85 years old, including 10,035 women who had reached menopause and 2,576 who had not. The postmenopausal women were more than a decade older, with an average age of 65, compared with 51 among premenopausal women.

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Even after researchers accounted for age at menopause and whether women used hormone therapy (HT) for menopausal symptoms — two factors that can independently impact the risk of several conditions involved in metabolic syndrome — researchers found that postmenopausal women were still 10 percent more likely to develop metabolic syndrome compared with premenopausal women.

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