Cardiovascular Fat, Menopause, and Sex Hormones in Women: The SWAN Cardiovascular Fat Ancillary Study.

J Clin Endocrinol Metab

University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health (S.R.E.K., C.H., E.B.-M., K.A.M.), Department of Epidemiology, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261; Lupus Center of Excellence (K.J.S.), Department of Medicine, Allegheny Health Network, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15212; Rush University Medical Center (I.J., L.H.P.), Department of Preventive Medicine, Chicago, Illinois 60612; Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute (M.J.B.), Division of Cardiology, Torrance, California 90502; Department of Medicine, Program in Health Disparities Research and Center for Health Equity (S.A.E.-R.), University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55414; and University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine (K.A.M.), Department of Psychiatry, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213.

Published: September 2015

Context: Cardiovascular risk increases in women after menopause. Mounting evidence demonstrates a role of cardiovascular fat (CF) in the pathogenesis of coronary heart disease, but no research has examined CF in relation to sex hormones or menopausal status in women.

Objective: The objective was to determine the relationship between CF depots, menopausal status, and endogenous sex hormones.

Design: Cross-sectional and longitudinal study designs were used.

Setting: The setting included the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN) Heart and Cardiovascular Fat Ancillary Study.

Participants: A total of 456 women (mean age, 50.75 y); 62% premenopausal/early perimenopausal, and 38% late peri-/postmenopausal.

Intervention: Menopausal status, endogenous sex hormones measured simultaneously with CF volumes, and circulating estradiol available 4.80 years (median) before CF measures.

Main Outcome Measures: Volumes of CF (epicardial adipose tissue [EAT], paracardial adipose tissue [PAT], total heart adipose tissue [TAT = EAT + PAT], and aortic perivascular adipose tissue [PVAT]).

Results: In final models, late peri-/postmenopausal women had 9.88% more EAT, 20.72% more PAT, and 11.69% more TAT volumes than pre-/early perimenopausal women (P < .05). PVAT was not associated with menopausal status. In final models, lower estradiol concentrations were associated with greater volumes of PAT and TAT (P < .05). Women with the greatest reduction in estradiol since baseline had greater volumes of PAT compared to women with the least reduction (P = .02).

Conclusions: Late peri-/postmenopausal women have greater volumes of heart fat compared with pre-/early perimenopausal women independent of age, obesity, and other covariates. Endogenous sex hormones are associated with CF. Perhaps CF plays a role in the higher risk of coronary heart disease reported in women after menopause.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4570161PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/JC.2015-2110DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cardiovascular fat
16
sex hormones
16
menopausal status
16
adipose tissue
16
endogenous sex
12
greater volumes
12
women
10
fat ancillary
8
women menopause
8
coronary heart
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!