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						After menopause, 
						vulvovaginal troubles are common 
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		[December 16, 2015] 
		By Kathryn Doyle 
		(Reuters Health) - After menopause, more 
		than half of women have vulvovaginal symptoms like itching, burning, 
		stinging, pain, irritation, dryness, discharge, or odor, and most do not 
		get the standard treatment, according to a new study. | 
        
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			 “Over 10 percent of postmenopausal women reported five or more 
			vulvovaginal symptoms within the last week,” said lead author Dr. 
			Elizabeth A. Erekson of the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth 
			College in Hanover, New Hampshire. 
 “During the reproductive years, while a woman is menstruating, the 
			vagina and vulva is exposed to estrogen,” Erekson told Reuters 
			Health by email. “After menopause, these areas are not exposed to 
			estrogen and women develop symptoms of vaginal dryness, burning, and 
			irritation,” and commonly also pain with intercourse.
 
 The researchers recruited 358 women over age 55 to complete 
			questionnaires on their vaginal symptoms, other menopause symptoms, 
			other pelvic problems, whether they had seen a gynecologist and if 
			so what treatment they had received.
 
 Just over half the women said they had vulvovaginal symptoms, with 
			many saying the symptoms caused emotional problems or had an impact 
			on their lifestyle. Three-quarters of those who were sexually active 
			with a partner said their symptoms posed problems there, too.
 
			 
			“Vaginal lubrication is the most common treatment for vulvovaginal 
			symptoms,” Erekson said. “I would caution women to be very careful 
			about the over-the-counter products they use . . . and to discuss 
			these symptoms and products with their doctor.”
 Many products marketed for vulvovaginal symptoms can cause severe 
			allergic reactions in most women, she added.
 
 Half of women with vulvovaginal symptoms also had urinary frequency 
			and nearly as many had leaking because of urinary urgency. Pelvic 
			organ prolapse and fecal incontinence were also more common for 
			these women, the research team reported in the journal Menopause.
 
 Nearly a third of women with symptoms had not seen a gynecologist 
			over the previous two years and 83 percent were not getting the 
			standard treatment for genitourinary syndrome of menopause, which is 
			low-dose vaginal estrogen via creams, pills or rings.
 
 “Vaginal estrogen does not carry the same side-effects and risks as 
			systemic estrogen (taken by mouth or worn as a patch) and is more 
			effective in the treatment of these local vulvovaginal symptoms,” 
			Erekson said.
 
			
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			Many women do not get treatment because they do not want to talk 
			about their symptoms with their doctor, North American Menopause 
			Society executive director Dr. JoAnn V. Pinkerton told Reuters 
			Health by phone.
 “Providers frequently don’t have time or training to evaluate for 
			this and offer therapies,” Pinkerton said. “Postmenopausal women 
			need to have regular gynecologic visits - they need to describe 
			their symptoms and its effects on their lives and providers have to 
			ask about them.”
 
 The boxed warning on low-dose vaginal estrogen products may make 
			some women fearful, even though the very small amounts of estrogen 
			that may be systemically absorbed through topical products have not 
			been associated with heart disease, dementia, stroke, blood clots, 
			gallstones, or breast or uterine cancer, she said.
 
 Women with bleeding on vaginal hormone therapies should have their 
			uterine lining evaluated by a doctor and women with prior cancers 
			should discuss these products with their oncologist first, but 
			otherwise, low-dose vaginal estrogen is safe, Pinkerton said.
 
 SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1Jacn0E Menopause, online December 7, 2015.
 
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