AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the effects of menstrual cycle phase, menopause, and hormone use on acute mountain sickness (AMS) among female trekkers in high-altitude regions of Nepal.
  • Researchers found that factors like menstrual cycle phase and menopause did not significantly influence the occurrence of AMS.
  • The findings suggest that hormonal status, including the use of hormonal contraception or hormone replacement therapy, is not a risk factor for AMS, indicating that women should be included in AMS research regardless of these factors.

Article Abstract

Gardner, Laurel, Linda E. Keyes, Caleb Phillips, Elan Small, Tejaswi Adhikari, Nathan Barott, Ken Zafren, Rony Maharjan, and James Marvel. Women at altitude: Menstrual-cycle phase, menopause, and exogenous progesterone are not associated with acute mountain sickness. 00:000-000, 2024. Elevated progesterone levels in women may protect against acute mountain sickness (AMS). The impact of hormonal contraception (HC) on AMS is unknown. We examined the effect of natural and exogenous progesterone on the occurrence of AMS. We conducted a prospective observational convenience study of female trekkers in Lobuche (4,940 m) and Manang (3,519 m). We collected data on last menstrual period, use of exogenous hormones, and development of AMS. There were 1,161 trekkers who met inclusion criteria, of whom 307 (26%) had AMS. There was no significant difference in occurrence of AMS between women in the follicular (28%) and the luteal (25%) phases of menstruation ( = 0.48). The proportion of premenopausal (25%) versus postmenopausal women (30%) with AMS did not differ ( = 0.33). The use of HC did not influence the occurrence of AMS (HC 23% vs. no HC 26%, = 0.47), nor did hormonal replacement therapy (HRT) (HRT 11% vs. no HRT 31%, = 0.13). We found no relationship between menstrual-cycle phase, menopausal status, or use of exogenous progesterone and the occurrence of AMS in trekkers and conclude that hormonal status is not a risk factor for AMS. Furthermore, women should not be excluded from future AMS studies based on hormonal status.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ham.2023.0100DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

exogenous progesterone
16
occurrence ams
16
menstrual-cycle phase
12
acute mountain
12
mountain sickness
12
ams
11
women altitude
8
altitude menstrual-cycle
8
phase menopause
8
menopause exogenous
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!