Bilateral Oophorectomy May Have an Unfavorable Effect on Glucose Metabolism Compared With Natural Menopause
-
Published:2014-11-15
Issue:
Volume:
Page:S395-S402
-
ISSN:1802-9973
-
Container-title:Physiological Research
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Physiol Res
Author:
LEJSKOVÁ M.1, PIŤHA J., ADÁMKOVÁ S., AUZKÝ O., ADÁMEK T., BABKOVÁ E., LÁNSKÁ V., ALUŠÍK Š.
Affiliation:
1. Department of Internal Medicine, Thomayer Hospital, Prague, Czech Republic
Abstract
The incidence of diabetes mellitus is rising worldwide. The aim of this prospective epidemiological study was to compare the effects of natural and surgical menopause on parameters of glucose metabolism. In a group of 587 repeatedly examined women, with a baseline age of 45-55 years, the following subgroups of women were separated: those after bilateral oophorectomy (BO, n=37) and those in natural menopause (NAT, n=380) including women menopausal already at baseline (POST, n=89). The study parameters including glycemia, insulinemia, HOMA-IR and beta-cell function using HOMA-β were determined at baseline and 6 years later. Over the study period, there was a marked rise in prediabetic and diabetic values of fasting glycemia; the percentage of women with diabetic values increased in the NAT (from 0.8 % to 3.9 %) and POST (from 2.2 % to 9.0 %) subgroups, with the highest prevalence in the BO subgroup (from 8.1 % to 10.8 %). While, among women with non-diabetic fasting glycemia, an increase in fasting glycemia was observed in all study subgroups, it was more marked in the BO subgroup than in the NAT and POST ones (p=0.02 both). This difference between NAT and BO was also found in the long-term trend of development of glycemia in non-diabetic women (p=0.014). Compared with natural menopause, bilateral oophorectomy may have an adverse effect on glucose metabolism.
Publisher
Institute of Physiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Subject
General Medicine,Physiology
Reference16 articles.
1. APPIAH D, WINTERS SJ, HORNUNG CA: Bilateral oophorectomy and the risk of incident diabetes in postmenopausal women. Diabetes Care 3: 725-733, 2014. 2. BRAND JS, VAN DER SCHOUW YT, ONLAND-MORET NC, SHARP SJ, ONG KK, KHAW KT, ARDANAZ E, AMIANO P, BOEING H, CHIRLAQUE MD, CLAVEL-CHAPELON F, CROWE FL, DE LAUZON-GUILLAIN B, DUELL EJ, FAGHERAZZI G, FRANKS PW, GRIONI S, GROOP LC, KAAKS R, KEY TJ, NILSSON PM, OVERVAD K, PALLI D, PANICO S, QUIRÓS JR, ROLANDSSON O, SACERDOTE C, SÁNCHEZ MJ, SLIMANI N, TEUCHER B, TJONNELAND A, TUMINO R, VAN DER A DL, FESKENS EJ, LANGENBERG C, FOROUHI NG, RIBOLI E, WAREHAM NJ: Age at menopause, reproductive life span, and type 2 diabetes risk: results from the EPIC-InterAct study. Diabetes Care 36: 1012-1019, 2013. 3. DADON D, TORNOVSKY-BABAEY S, FURTH-LAVI J, BEN-ZVI D, ZIV O, SCHYR-BEN-HAROUSH R, STOLOVICH-RAIN M, HIJA A, PORAT S, GRANOT Z, WEINBERG-COREM N, DOR Y, GLASER B: Glucose metabolism: key endogenous regulator of β-cell replication and survival. Diabetes Obes Metab 14: 101-108, 2012. 4. DEFRONZO RA: Banting lecture. From the triumvirate to the ominous octet: a new paradigm for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Diabetes 58: 773-795, 2009. 5. DI DONATO P, GIULINI NA, BACCHI MODENA A, CICCHETTI G, COMITINI G, GENTILE G, CRISTIANI P, CARECCIA A, ESPOSITO E, GUALDI F, GOLINELLI S, BERGAMINI E, MASELLIS G, RASTELLI S, GIGLI C, ELIA A, MARCHESONI D, STICOTTI F, ET AL.; GRUPPO DI STUDIO PROGETTO MENOPAUSA ITALIA: Risk factors for type 2 diabetes in women attending menopause clinics in Italy: a cross-sectional study. Climacteric 8: 287-293, 2005.
Cited by
9 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|