Women with later start to
periods, menopause more likely to reach age 90
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[July 28, 2016]
By Andrew M. Seaman
(Reuters Health) - Women with later
menarche and later menopause are more likely to reach age 90 than those
whose reproductive milestones come at earlier ages, suggests a new
study.
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"People have always wondered whether the timing of reproductive
events affect longevity, but no study to date has evaluated that
relationship," said lead author Aladdin Shadyab, of the University
of California, San Diego School of Medicine.
The research team used data collected from 16,251 participants in
the Women's Health Initiative, starting between 1993 and 1998 and
continuing until August 2014.
All the women were born before September 1924; 8,892, or 55%,
survived to age 90.
Women who were at least 12 years old at menarche were about 9% more
likely to reach age 90 than those who were younger.
And women who were at least 50 when their periods stopped were about
20% more likely to reach age 90 than women who entered menopause
before age 40. This was true whether menopause was natural or
surgical.
A longer reproductive lifespan was also tied to longevity. Women who
menstruated for more than 40 years were 13% more likely to reach age
90 than those who had less than 33 reproductive years, the authors
reported in a paper released July 27 by the journal Menopause.
Shadyab and colleagues can't say why later periods and later
menopause are tied to longer life, but the link could be related to
lifestyle factors and genetics.
"It is possible that those who begin menstruating later and those
who experience menopause at older ages are in better health long
term," Shadyab told Reuters Health.
There could also be genes that affect both the start of periods and
menopause and a woman's length of life, he added.
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"Further studies are needed to determine why reproductive factors
predict living to age 90 in women," he said.
Dr. JoAnn Pinkerton of the University of Virginia in
Charlottesville, who is executive director of The North American
Menopause Society, agrees that lifestyle factors and genetics are
likely behind the link between later reproductive milestones and
longevity.
Pinkerton, who was not involved in the study, said research suggests
that hormones that may protect women's hearts are lost during
menopause.
Also, she said some behaviors, such as smoking, have an impact on
overall health and on the timing of menopause.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1Pc1GwH
Menopause 2016.
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