The endocrinology of perimenopause: need for a paradigm shift
Frontiers in bioscience (Scholar edition), 3(2), 474-486, 2011
Abstract
Perimenopause, rather than a time of declining estrogen, is characterized by three major hormonal changes that may begin in regularly menstruating women in their mid-thirties: erratically higher estradiol levels, decreased progesterone levels (in normally ovulatory, short luteal phase or anovulatory cycles), and disturbed ovarian-pituitary-hypothalamic feedback relationships. Recent data show that approximately a third of all perimenopausal cycles have a major surge in estradiol occurring de novo during the luteal phase. This phenomenon, named "luteal out of phase (LOOP)" event, may explain a large proportion of symptoms and signs for symptomatic perimenopausal women. Large urinary hormone data-sets from women studied yearly over a number of years in the Study of Women Across the Nation (SWAN) and in the Tremin data will eventually provide a more clear prospective understanding of within-woman hormonal changes. Predicting menopause proximity with FSH or Inhibin B levels is documented to be ineffective. Anti-Mullerian hormone levels may prove predictive. Finally, there is an urgent need to change perimenopause understandings, language and therapies used for midlife women's symptoms to reflect these hormonal changes.
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Cite this article
Jerilynn C Prior, & Christine L Hitchcock (1900). The endocrinology of perimenopause: need for a paradigm shift. *Frontiers in bioscience (Scholar edition)*, *3*(2), 474-486. https://doi.org/10.2741/s166
Jerilynn C Prior, Christine L Hitchcock. The endocrinology of perimenopause: need for a paradigm shift. Front Biosci (Schol Ed). 1900;3(2):474-486. doi:10.2741/s166
Jerilynn C Prior, and Christine L Hitchcock. "The endocrinology of perimenopause: need for a paradigm shift." *Frontiers in bioscience (Scholar edition)*, vol. 3, no. 2, 1900, pp. 474-486.