Publications by authors named "M C Osorio-Wender"

Objectives: The risks and benefits of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) are, at least in part, mediated by the metabolic individuality of women. Therefore, we investigated the association between polymorphisms at the estrogen receptor 1 gene (ESR1) and at the apolipoprotein E gene (APOE) with lipid and lipoprotein levels in order to verify whether these concentrations are modulated by these gene variants in women with different hormonal status.

Methods: One hundred and eighteen postmenopausal women using oral HRT with estrogen or estrogen plus progestagen (HRT+, mean age=56+/-6.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Endogenous and exogenous sex steroid hormones have multiple effects on lipid and lipoprotein metabolism. It is also known that estrogen has antiatherogenic actions, therefore we considered examining whether there was any association between polymorphisms in estrogen-metabolizing genes and lipid levels in women. We investigated the association between variants in genes related to estrogen biosynthesis (CYP19-TTTA(n)) and estrogen catabolism (CYP1A1*2A, CYP1A1*2C, CYP1A2-Asn516Asn, CYP3A4*1B, and COMT-Val158Met) with serum lipid levels in a cross-sectional study with 472 Brazilian women of European descent.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sex steroid hormones have multiple effects on lipid metabolism. We investigated the association between two common single nucleotide polymorphisms of the estrogen receptor 2 gene (ESR2), 1082G>A and 1730A>G, and PROGINS polymorphism of the progesterone receptor gene (PGR) with lipoprotein levels in a cross-sectional study with 472 women of European descent. The women were classified into three subgroups according to hormonal status, premenopausal women (n=187; mean age=34+/-9.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Endometrial response to natural estradiol and low-dose vaginal progesterone replacement therapy was evaluated in 20 postmenopausal women with chronic, mild-to-moderate hypertension. A cyclic hormone replacement therapy (HRT) regimen was used (21/28 days) with percutaneous estradiol (1.5 mg/day) and vaginal micronized progesterone (100 mg/day).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The present study evaluated the short-term effects of percutaneous 17 beta-estradiol on blood pressure, metabolic profile and hormonal levels in postmenopausal women with systemic arterial hypertension. After a wash-out period of 15 days, 10 hypertensive patients were treated with guanabenz acetate to control blood pressure, followed by 17 beta-estradiol in the form of hydroalcoholic gel administered for 21 of 28 days of each cycle, for 3 cycles. Patients were evaluated before, during and 2 months after estrogen administration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF