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Menopause Symptoms are Predictable
The number of eggs left in a woman's ovaries are like the grains of sand in
an hourglass, ticking away the hours on her biological clock.
Researchers now say they may be able to predict when that clock will wind down.
And while doctors can't actually count the number of eggs in an ovary, they can
measure ovarian volume. British researchers say there's a direct correlation
between the two, and by measuring ovarian volume with transvaginal ultrasound,
doctors should be able to predict when menopause will set in and how many
fertile years a woman has left.
According to the study authors, this information will revolutionize the care of
women looking for assisted reproductive technologies, including those who were
treated for childhood cancers as well as women who want to put off starting a
family for whatever reason.
Although information still needs to be validated in clinical studies, its
benefit is most likely to start with women who are being treated for cancer and
women attending fertility clinics, said Tom Kelsey, co-author of the study
appearing June 17 in the journal Human Reproduction.
"If women looking for some sort of assisted conception and their physicians know
that they've got a long time till menopause, then you could plan for a range of
treatments," said Kelsey, who is a senior research fellow at the University of
St. Andrews in Scotland. "If you knew menopause was likely in four to five
years, you'd plan a different set of IVF [in vitro fertilization] treatments."
Others reiterate, however, that the findings should be treated with caution.
"Should a young woman who is 30 years old go for a test to figure out whether
she's got three, five or 10 years left on her fertility? Should she make career
decisions and life decisions? Are these data good enough to make those
determinations?" asked Dr. Alan Copperman, director of reproductive medicine at
Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York City. "The answer is obviously no to all
of those questions. The predictive value of this test is not good enough to go
and tell someone to change their life."
According to the article, eggs form in a female's ovary while she is still in
the womb, peaking at several million about halfway through gestation and then
starting a continuous decline. At birth, there are several hundred thousand and,
when menstruation begins, about 300,000. At about age 37, a woman has about
25,000 eggs left, and at menopause only about 1,000.
The time at which menopause sets in is widely believed to be based on the number
of eggs reaching a critically low threshold.
The authors of this study measured ovarian volume with transvaginal ultrasound,
then looked at the relationship between ovarian volume -- ovaries shrink as a
woman ages -- and number of eggs. They then applied mathematical and computer
models to predict menopause.
The study authors are negotiating with a medical school to set up clinical
trials. The idea would be to follow women to see if their predictions were
indeed correct.
While these authors have come up with a tool to potentially help women plan
their lives, a second study in the same issue of Human Reproduction warned that
women might not want to leave it too late. Assisted reproductive technology
(ART) could not be relied upon to fully compensate for lack of natural fertility
after the age of 35, the article stated.
The authors used a computer simulation model to determine that the overall
success rate of assisted reproductive technology would be 30 percent for those
attempting to get pregnant from age 30, 24 percent for those trying from age 35,
and 17 percent from age 40.
SOURCES: Tom Kelsey, Ph.D., senior research fellow, University of St. Andrews,
St. Andrews, Scotland; Alan Copperman, M.D., director, reproductive medicine,
Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York; June 17, 2004, Human Reproduction
For more information visit:
http://www.menozac.com/?aid=184265
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