TUESDAY, Aug. 10 (HealthDay News) -- Women's cholesterol levels vary throughout their menstrual cycle as their levels of estrogen rise and fall, a new study reveals.
This means that to get a clear picture of a woman's cholesterol
levels, doctors may need to take readings over several months before
deciding whether the patient needs to have her levels lowered, the
researchers noted. "Doctors who are looking at women [for] high cholesterol have to take
into account the phase of the menstrual cycle they are at when they
take the measurement," said study co-author Enrique F. Schisterman,
chief of the Epidemiology Branch at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
To make cholesterol readings more consistent and reliable,
measurements should be taken at the same time each month for a couple of
cycles, Schisterman added.
"Practically, it's easier to recognize the beginning of a cycle," he
said. "So if you do it consistently at the beginning of the cycle then
you will get consistent measures over time."
The report is published in the current online edition of the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.
For the study, Schisterman's group compared levels of estrogen with
cholesterol and triglyceride levels in 259 healthy women, aged 18 to 44.
Most of the women (94 percent), had 14 or more measurements taken over
two menstrual cycles. The women also charted the phases of their cycles
using at-home fertility monitors that detect hormone levels indicating ovulation.
Most of the women were physically active and did not smoke. Only 5
percent had cholesterol levels higher than 200 mg/dL, which is
borderline high-risk for heart disease. But, cholesterol levels among 19.7 percent of the women reached 200 mg/dL at least once.
In addition, some obese women over 40 had greater fluctuation in
cholesterol levels than did the rest of the group, the researchers
noted. The researchers found that as estrogen levels rise, HDL, or "good" cholesterol also rises, peaking at ovulation.
At the same time, as estrogen levels increased, total and LDL,
or "bad" cholesterol, as well as levels of triglycerides, fell,
Schisterman's team found. This decline began a couple of days after
estrogen levels peaked at ovulation.
In addition, levels of total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol and
triglycerides were lowest just before the start of menstruation, the
researchers noted. "This is more recognition that hormones play a very important role in women's
lives on all levels, including basic tests, like the test for
cholesterol," Schisterman said. "The menstrual cycle plays a very
important role in women's overall health."
Dr. Jennifer Glueck, an assistant professor of clinical medicine in the division of endocrinology, diabetes
and metabolism at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine,
said that "I really wasn't aware that the levels of the lipids could
fluctuate like that over the course of the menstrual cycle."
However, the finding may not be particularly clinically relevant to this group of young women, Glueck said.
"These are young healthy women that you wouldn't be considering to
start cholesterol-lowering medications on," she said. "It doesn't seem
like it pushed them into categories where you would initiate treatment."
So while the finding is interesting, it probably won't change clinical practice, she noted.http://www.healthscout.com/news/1/642011_2/main.html
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