Low estrogen levels around menopause may be cause of chronic pain in women
By - Dr. Kamal Kant Kohli Kohli
Published On 2019-03-07 13:50 GMT | Update On 2019-03-07 13:50 GMT
Low estrogen levels are linked to decreased pain tolerance in perimenopausal women.This may be reason of chronic pain among women around Menopause.
It is known that a number of health conditions area affected by estrogen including pain sensitivity. A new study has found that there is a link between menopause symptoms and chronic pain. The Study results are published online today in Menopause, the journal of The North American Menopause Society (NAMS).
Women are more likely than men to report common chronic pain conditions such as back pain, fibromyalgia, arthritis, and osteoarthritis. Women with these conditions additionally report greater pain severity and pain-related disability than their male counterparts. Although the causes of chronic pain risk are not well understood, it has been documented that the risk for common conditions that cause or exacerbate pain is highest in midlife women, when estrogen levels are fluctuating and women are entering perimenopause or postmenopause.
Common changes related to menopause and aging include weight gain and decreased physical activity, which can contribute to chronic pain morbidity, as can impaired sleep and negative mood, which are also known to affect symptom sensitivity and pain tolerance.
In this latest large-scale study of women veterans, researchers hypothesized that even after accounting for age and other known risk factors, menopause symptoms would be associated with increased odds of diagnosed chronic pain and chronic pain morbidity. What the study showed was that women with a higher menopause symptom burden may be the most vulnerable for chronic pain. More specifically, women with menopause symptoms had nearly twice the chance of having chronic pain and multiple chronic pain diagnoses.
Study results appear in the article "Menopause symptoms and chronic pain in a national sample of midlife women veterans."
"Changing levels of hormones around menopause have complex interactions with pain modulation and pain sensitivity, which may be associated with vulnerability to either the development or exacerbation of pain conditions," says Dr. JoAnn Pinkerton, NAMS executive director. "This study suggests that menopause symptom burden may also be related to chronic pain experience."
For more information about menopause and healthy aging, visit http://www.menopause.org
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