Estriol in the management of the menopause

JAMA, 239(16), 1638-1641

Source

Abstract

Estriol was administered for a six-month period as estrogen replacement therapy to 52 symptomatic postmenopausal women. Assays of serum follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), estrone, and estradiol were performed before and during therapy. During this period of administration, vaginal cytology, cervical mucus, and endometrial studies were performed. Clinical effectiveness was directly related to dosage (2 to 8 mg/day). Estriol (8 mg/day) failed to induce endometrial proliferation and proved a poor suppressor of FSH and LH. This agent's capacity to relieve vasomotor instability and improve vaginal maturation without notable side effects is sufficient reason to include this drug in the management of the postmenopausal syndrome.

Topics

estriol menopause hormone replacement therapy, estriol postmenopausal vasomotor symptoms treatment, estriol endometrial safety no proliferation, estriol vaginal maturation postmenopausal women, Tzingounis Greenblatt estriol menopause, estriol dosage FSH LH suppression postmenopause, weak estrogen replacement therapy menopause management, estriol versus estradiol endometrial effects, estriol cervical mucus vaginal cytology postmenopausal, bioidentical estriol hot flashes menopause

Cite this article

Tzingounis, V. A., Aksu, M. F., & Greenblatt, R. B. (1978). Estriol in the management of the menopause. *JAMA*, *239*(16), 1638-1641.

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