Abstract
Abstract Introduction Surgical early menopause is early menopause due to medical reasons rather than the natural aging process. Pulse wave velocity (PWV) and augmentation index (AIx) are simple and non-invasive parameters for assessment of arterial stiffness. The aim of this study investigated the arterial stiffness in the surgical early menopause patients. Method We included 40 patient early surgical menopause and 40 control group patients with clinically and demographically similar characteristics. Oscillometric measurement method with Mobil-O-Graph 24h-ABPM NG® arteriography was used to measure the arterial stiffness and cardiovascular hemodynamic parameters. Results Of the 40 patients who underwent surgical early menopause, 27 (67.5%) had malignancy, 11 (27.5%) with myoma and 2 (5%) with bleeding. There were no differences in baseline demographic, laboratory, echocardiographic parameters and coronary artery disease risk factors.In terms of arterial stiffness parameters, PWV were significantly higher in the early surgical menopause group than in the control group (6.5±0.8; 5.6±1.2 p<0.001), but there was no statistically significant difference in Alx (28.3±10.9; 27.4±9.0 p=0.69).Also, there was no statistically significant difference in terms of cardiac hemodynamic parameters and central aortic pressures. Conclusion When arterial stiffness is noninvasively evaluated by oscillometric method, it is significantly increased in surgical early menopause patients independent of other risk factors. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: None
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