If you go through menopause in your early 40s… Asthma risk is 30% lower?

Research results have shown that the later the age of natural menopause, the greater the risk of asthma. (Photo = Getty Image Bank)

While many studies have shown that menopause starting at an early age is more harmful to women’s health and increases the risk of health diseases such as heart disease, diabetes, osteoporosis, and depression, a recent study showed that the later the age of natural menopause, the greater the risk of asthma. Done.

Researchers at York University in Canada published the results of a study on the association between natural menopause age and asthma incidence in non-smoking postmenopausal women in the online edition of Menopause, a journal of the North American Menopause Society. It was published under the title ‘risk of asthma among postmenopausal women from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging’.

The researchers conducted an analysis based on data from a 10-year follow-up survey of 14,406 women aged 40 to 85 living in Canada. All were non-smokers, did not suffer from premenopausal asthma, and were naturally menopausal women.

As a result of the analysis, it was found that women whose menopause age was 40 to 44 years old had a 30% lower risk of developing asthma compared to women who had menopause between 50 and 54 years old. Researchers suggested the role of estrogen as a factor influencing this.

Several existing studies have also suggested a link between asthma and sex hormones. In childhood, asthma occurs more often in men than in women. However, after puberty, the incidence of asthma in women increases, and symptoms tend to be more severe than in male asthma patients. Additionally, studies have shown that women receiving hormone treatment have a 63% increased risk of asthma. It has also been found that women with a high body mass index have a higher risk of asthma. This is because fat is involved in estrogen production.

“This study shows that women have a higher risk of asthma than men in adulthood, highlighting gender differences in asthma,” said Dr. Stephanie Fabion, medical director of the Menopause Society. “Women who go through menopause later are more likely to go through menopause earlier. “It shows that they are at greater risk than other women,” he said. “Clinicians should be aware of this association and monitor asthma symptoms in women with a late onset of natural menopause,” he added.

According to the researchers, asthma is a common chronic disease that affects more than 300 million people around the world, and asthma that develops in adulthood generally has more severe symptoms and is more difficult to treat than asthma in children.

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Source: kormedi.com