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- Title
Oxidative Stress and Menopausal Status: The Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults Cohort Study.
- Authors
Heravi, Amir S.; Michos, Erin D.; Zhao, Di; Ambale-Venkatesh, Bharath; Doria De Vasconcellos, Henrique; Lloyd-Jones, Donald; Schreiner, Pamela J.; Reis, Jared P.; Wu, Colin; Lewis, Cora E.; Shikany, James M.; Sidney, Stephen; Guallar, Eliseo; Ndumele, Chiadi E.; Ouyang, Pamela; Hoogeveen, Ron C.; Lima, Joao A.C.; Vaidya, Dhananjay; Post, Wendy S.
- Abstract
Background: Low endogenous estrogen concentrations after menopause may contribute to higher oxidative stress and greater cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. However, differences in oxidative stress between similarly aged premenopausal and postmenopausal women are not well-characterized on a population level. We hypothesized that urinary isoprostane concentrations, a standard measure of systemic oxidative stress, are higher in women who have undergone menopause compared to premenopausal women. Methods and Results: We examined differences in urinary 8-isoprostane (iPF2α-III) and 2,3-dinor-8-isoprostane (iPF2α-III-M) indexed to urinary creatinine between 279 postmenopausal and 196 premenopausal women in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study, using linear regression with progressive adjustment for sociodemographic factors and traditional CVD risk factors. Unadjusted iPF2α-III-M concentrations were higher among postmenopausal compared to premenopausal women (Median [25th, 75th percentile]: 1762 [1178, 2974] vs. 1535 [1067, 2462] ng/g creatinine; p = 0.01). Menopause was associated with 25.5% higher iPF2α-III-M (95% confidence interval [6.5–47.9]) adjusted for age, race, college education, and field center. Further adjustments for tobacco use (21.2% [2.9–42.6]) and then CVD risk factors (18.8% [0.1–39.6]) led to additional partial attenuation. Menopause was associated with higher iPF2α-III in Black but not White women. Conclusions: We conclude that postmenopausal women had higher oxidative stress, which may contribute to greater CVD risk. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00005130.
- Subjects
CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors; COLLEGE students; CONFIDENCE intervals; AGE distribution; BLACK people; ESTROGEN; REGRESSION analysis; RACE; OXIDATIVE stress; YOUNG adults; POSTMENOPAUSE; CORONARY artery disease; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; CORONARY arteries; SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors; WHITE people; MENOPAUSE; DATA analysis software; LONGITUDINAL method; EDUCATIONAL attainment; TOBACCO; DISEASE risk factors; ADULTS
- Publication
Journal of Women's Health (15409996), 2022, Vol 31, Issue 7, p1057
- ISSN
1540-9996
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1089/jwh.2021.0248