Guideline for Preventing Weight Gain in Women at Midlife
Panel recommends counseling all women aged 40 to 60 years on healthy eating and physical activity to maintain weight or prevent weight gain.
Panel recommends counseling all women aged 40 to 60 years on healthy eating and physical activity to maintain weight or prevent weight gain.
Researchers delineate strategies to prevent weight gain and body composition changes among women during perimenopause and menopause.
The link between menopause and changes in cognitive function is a subject of debate. Researchers sought to investigate the potential association with the aim of improving womens’ health.
Airway symptoms may develop in menopausal women with no prior history of asthma following the initiation of hormone replacement therapy.
For patients with moderate to severe GSM, low-dose vaginal estrogens, vaginal DHEA inserts, systemic estrogen therapy, and ospemifene are recommended.
For postmenopausal women, antidepressants, beta-blockers, and insulin are associated with weight gain over three years.
In recently menopausal women using hormone treatment, circulating levels of pituitary-ovarian hormones are associated with changes in white matter hyperintensities.
Exposure to some perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances may be associated with an earlier onset of natural menopause.
The age at and cause of period cessation were not found to be associated with conventional cardiovascular risk factors across middle age and later life.
Longer use of hormone therapy (HT) is associated with high muscle mass and a low prevalence of sarcopenia in postmenopausal women.