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Estrogen Shows Protection Against Cerebral Aneurysm Print E-mail
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TS-Si News Service   
Friday, 06 May 2011 15:00
Chicago, IL, USA. Women who develop cerebral aneurysms are less likely to have taken the oral contraceptive pill or hormone replacement therapy, suggesting taking estrogen could have a protective effect, says research.

Cerebral aneurysms, weaknesses in the brain's blood vessel walls cause the vessels to balloon, occur more frequently in women. It has been suggested that female hormones may play a role in their development.


If the cerebral aneurysm ruptures, because the ballooning wall bursts, this can be life threatening and is known as a haemorrhagic stroke. Estrogen helps maintain the structure of blood vessel walls by promoting the division of endothelial cells within the vessel walls, which is important for repair if the vessels become damaged. However, estrogen levels drop significantly at the menopause.

Women and Cerebral Aneurysms

Women have been shown to be more likely to develop a cerebral aneurysms after the age of 40 years, and aneurysms are most likely to rupture between the ages of 50 and 59 years.
In an article that appears in the Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery, researchers from the Rush University Medical Center asked 60 women with cerebral aneurysms about their use of the oral contraceptive pill and hormone replacement therapy, and this was compared with usage in 4,682 other women drawn from the general public.

Women with cerebral aneurysms were found to have been significantly less likely to have taken oral contraceptives or hormone replacement therapy. Women with cerebral aneurysms also had an earlier average age of menopause.

Previous studies have shown that use of the oral contraceptive pill protects against haemorrhagic stroke in later life, while women who start their periods early and/or do not have children are at greater risk.

Current medical management of unruptured cerebral aneurysms is limited and consists mainly of smoking cessation and blood pressure control. The alternative is a surgical intervention, such as the insertion of a coil or placement of a clip, to try to control the aneurysm, and a lifetime of anxiety.

The authors say the results of this study may not only provide additional insight into how cerebral aneurysms develop and progress, but more importantly may lead to new therapies for patients. Some patients have an underlying vascular predisposition towards aneurysms, harboring an unruptured cerebral aneurysm or at risk of developing one.

CitationOral contraceptive and hormone replacement therapy in women with cerebral aneurysms. Michael Chen, Bichun Ouyang, Lindsay Goldstein-Smith, Lisa Feldman. Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery 2011; ePub ahead of print. doi:10.1136/jnis.2010.003855

Abstract

Background and purpose. Although ruptured cerebral aneurysms are more common in postmenopausal women than in premenopausal women, or men, the putative hormonal role that underlies this disparity is poorly understood. Prior clinical and laboratory studies suggest that estrogen, via multiple mechanisms, is critical in maintaining arterial vascular integrity and tone. Use of oral contraceptives (OCP) and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) attenuates the sudden physiologic drops in estrogen seen during the normal menstrual cycle and at menopause. The goal of this study was to compare the rate of exogenous estrogen modifying agent use in a cohort of women with cerebral aneurysms with large sample national averages.

Methods. With IRB approval, a retrospective, case control study was performed via trained telephone interviews at a US urban tertiary center. Female patients with cerebral aneurysms under the care of a single physician (MC) from over a 2 year period were compared with a publically available data set from 4682 random female controls in the US, also interviewed via telephone using random digit dialing (Ann Epidemiol 2002;12:213–22). The questions asked of both groups were similar with regard to gynecologic history and the use and duration of estrogen modifying medications. Variables included age of menarche, parity, age at birth of first child, use of oral contraceptives and duration if any, use of HRT and duration if any, and age at menopause. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed.

Results. Between 2008 and 2009, 49 cases were successfully interviewed with an age range between 31 and 80 years. X² tests of independence were performed to examine the relationship between OCPs or HRTs in cases compared with controls. The lower rate of OCP (X² (1, N=)=0, p<0.0001) and HRT (X² (1, N=)=0, p=0.0292) use among cases was statistically significant. Furthermore, an independent samples t test showed a statistically significant lower mean duration of OCP among cases compared with controls (p=0.0041).

Conclusions. Women with cerebral aneurysms not only used OCP and HRT less frequently than the general population but if they did it was of shorter duration. These results support the hypothesis that physiologic drops in estrogen that occur during the menstrual cycle and particularly at menopause may explain why cerebral aneurysms are more frequently found in women, particularly during menopause. A protective role for pharmacologic estrogen stabilization in women who are at risk for cerebral aneurysm formation warrants further study.

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TS-Si is dedicated to the acceptance, medical treatment, and legal protection of individuals correcting the misalignment of their brains and their anatomical sex, while supporting their transition into society as hormonally reconstituted and surgically corrected citizens.

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Last Updated on Friday, 06 May 2011 12:51
 
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