Abstract

The authors examined the effects of surgical menopause, with or without hormone replacement therapy (HRT), on psychosocial functioning and lipid levels in a population-based study of initially premenopausal women. Within 5 years of study entry, 28 women underwent hysterectomy, with 9 retaining their ovaries and 19 having bilateral salpingo oophorectomy (BSO), and with 173 premenopausal women as a comparison group. Women undergoing hysterectomy reported fewer stress symptoms and a more optimistic attitude at follow-up, whereas BSO cases without HRT had lower mean total high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and HDL2, relative to premenopausal women. Subject to limited power, the authors' findings suggest that surgical menopause among middle-aged women does not lead to negative psychological outcomes but that BSO in the absence of hormone use has significant adverse effects on the HDL and HDL2.

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