Woods Nancy Fugate, Mitchell Ellen Sullivan, Smith-Dijulio Kathleen
Family and Child Nursing, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Menopause. 2009 Jul-Aug;16(4):708-18. doi: 10.1097/gme.0b013e318198d6b2.
Cortisol levels rise among some women during the late stage of the menopausal transition (MT), but we know little about changes in cortisol levels in relation to menopause-related factors (MT stage, urinary estrone glucuronide [E1G], testosterone, follicle-stimulating hormone [FSH]), stress-related factors (epinephrine, norepinephrine, and perceived stress), symptoms (hot flashes, mood, memory, and sleep), social factors (income adequacy, role burden, social support, employment, parenting, and history of sexual abuse), and health-related factors (depressed mood, perceived health, physical appraisal, body mass index, and smoking). The aim of the study was to examine the influence of menopause-related factors, stress-related factors, symptoms, social factors, and health-related factors on cortisol levels during the MT.
Participants were a subset of Seattle Midlife Women's Health Study who provided data during the late reproductive, early and late MT stages, or early postmenopause and who were not using hormone therapy or corticosteroids (N = 132 women, up to 5,218 observations). Data provided included menstrual calendars for staging the MT, annual health reports, health diaries, and overnight urine specimens (assayed for cortisol, catecholamines, E1G, and FSH) between 1990 and 2005 were included. Perceived stress, symptoms, and health behaviors were assessed in a health diary. Health-related and social factors were assessed in an annual health update. Multilevel modeling was used to test the effects of menopause-related and other factors on overnight cortisol levels.
When tested with age as a measure of time, menopause-related covariates, including E1G, FSH, and testosterone, were associated with significant increases in overnight cortisol levels (P < 0.0001). Likewise, epinephrine and norepinephrine were each associated significantly with overnight cortisol levels (P < 0.0001). In multivariate analyses, E1G, FSH, and testosterone constituted the best set of predictors.
Overnight cortisol levels during the MT were associated with E1G, testosterone, and FSH levels. In addition, they were significantly and positively associated with epinephrine and norepinephrine. MT stage, symptoms, and social, stress-related, and health-related factors had little relationship to overnight cortisol levels when other biological indicators were considered.
在绝经过渡后期(MT),部分女性的皮质醇水平会升高,但我们对皮质醇水平与绝经相关因素(MT阶段、尿雌酮葡萄糖醛酸苷[E1G]、睾酮、卵泡刺激素[FSH])、应激相关因素(肾上腺素、去甲肾上腺素和感知到的压力)、症状(潮热、情绪、记忆力和睡眠)、社会因素(收入充足程度、角色负担、社会支持、就业、育儿和性虐待史)以及健康相关因素(情绪低落、感知到的健康状况、身体评估、体重指数和吸烟)之间的变化了解甚少。本研究的目的是探讨绝经相关因素、应激相关因素、症状、社会因素和健康相关因素对MT期间皮质醇水平的影响。
参与者是西雅图中年女性健康研究的一个子集,她们在生殖后期、MT早期和晚期或绝经后早期提供了数据,且未使用激素疗法或皮质类固醇(N = 132名女性,最多5218次观察)。提供的数据包括用于确定MT阶段的月经日历、年度健康报告、健康日记以及1990年至2005年间的过夜尿样(检测皮质醇、儿茶酚胺、E1G和FSH)。在健康日记中评估感知到的压力、症状和健康行为。在年度健康更新中评估健康相关和社会因素。采用多水平模型来检验绝经相关因素和其他因素对过夜皮质醇水平的影响。
以年龄作为时间指标进行检验时,绝经相关协变量,包括E1G、FSH和睾酮,与过夜皮质醇水平的显著升高相关(P < 0.0001)。同样,肾上腺素和去甲肾上腺素各自与过夜皮质醇水平显著相关(P < 0.0001)。在多变量分析中,E1G、FSH和睾酮构成了最佳预测指标组。
MT期间的过夜皮质醇水平与E1G、睾酮和FSH水平相关。此外,它们与肾上腺素和去甲肾上腺素显著正相关。当考虑其他生物学指标时,MT阶段、症状以及社会、应激相关和健康相关因素与过夜皮质醇水平关系不大。