Abstract

Menopause normally occurs between 45-55 years of age, marks the end of a woman’s reproductive lifespan, and is accompanied by a reduction in estrogen that has substantial physiological effects. The standard medical view is that these changes underlie high postmenopausal disease rates, defining menopause as an estrogen deficiency condition needing treatment. This view stems from the idea that extended postmenopausal longevity is a consequence of recent technological developments, such that women now outlive their evolutionarily-programmed physiological functional lifespan.Increasingly, however, researchers employing an evolutionary medicine framework have used data from comparative demography, comparative biology, and human behavioral ecology to challenge the mainstream medical view. Instead, these data suggest that a two-decade human postmenopausal lifespan is an evolved, species-typical trait that distinguishes humans from other primates, and has deep roots in our evolutionary past. This view rejects the inevitability of high rates of postmenopausal disease and the concept of menopause as pathology. Rather, high postmenopausal disease risk likely stems from specific lifestyle differences between industrialized societies and foraging societies of the type that dominated human evolutionary history. Women in industrialized societies tend to have higher estrogen levels during premenopausal life, and experience a greater reduction in estrogen across menopause than do women living in foraging societies, with potentially important physiological consequences. The anthropological approach to understanding postmenopausal disease risk reframes the postmenopausal lifespan as an integral period in the human life cycle, and offers alternative avenues for disease prevention by highlighting the importance of lifestyle effects on health.

Highlights

  • Anyone seeking to learn more about the subject of menopause1 will find standard clinical and public health policy interpretations readily and prominently available

  • Epidemiological evidence shows that the period surrounding and following menopause is associated with an increased prevalence of disease and disease risk factors, those relating to the metabolic syndrome including weight gain, body composition change, obesity, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, and insulin resistance, all of which increase risk for heart attack, stroke, and type 2 diabetes (Torrens et al 2009; Enns and Tiidus 2010)

  • This paper presents an alternative approach to understanding menopause and postmenopausal health, that of evolutionary medicine, which follows from the principle that modern human health and disease are at least partially products of the evolutionary forces that have shaped modern human biology and variation (Nesse and Williams 1994; Williams and Nesse 1991; Gammelgaard 2000)

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Summary

Introduction

Anyone seeking to learn more about the subject of menopause1 will find standard clinical and public health policy interpretations readily and prominently available. Comparisons of menopausal physiology, postmenopausal survival, and health across species and between human cultures allows for the identification of lifestyle and behavioral factors that may play a role in the etiology of metabolic diseases among women living in industrialized societies, presenting non-pharmacological and non-hormonal avenues for disease prevention.

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