Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
60 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2022-03-01
2026-05-26
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Hot flushes are the most common symptom of climacteric and are reported as feelings of intense warmth along with sweating, flushing and chills. Indeed, it is suggested that 50-80% of women post-menopause will experience hot flushes. Hot flushes usually last for one to five minutes but can last up to an hour. The median duration of symptoms is about four years, but some can last as long as 20 years. Although estrogen withdrawal is necessary to produce a hot flush, it is not sufficient to explain the occurrence of them as some women do not experience them, but all women experience a deficit in estradiol and progesterone during menopause. There are also no relationships between symptoms and plasma, urinary, or vaginal levels of estrogens, nor are there differences in plasma levels between women with and without hot flushes. The putative physiological trigger of hot flashes is core body temperature elevations acting within a reduced thermoneutral zone. This reduction appears to be closely related to increased central nervous levels of norepinephrine (NE), partly through alpha 2 -adrenergic receptors. The involvement of NE in central thermoregulation and the etiology of hot flushes are supported by results from experimental and animal studies that demonstrate increased central nervous system NE levels narrow the width of the thermoneutral zone. During hot flushes, skin temperature increases in digits, face, arms, chest, abdomen, back and legs; sweating often occurs; and heart rate increases. In previous research, measurable sweating occurred in 90% of hot flushes. Sweat rate corresponds closely to skin conductance, the electrical measure of sweating, during hot flushes. Indeed, sternal skin conductance and skin temperature are the gold standard objective measurement of a hot flush.
Body weight and adiposity are increased by estrogen deficiency, thus estradiol may have a protective role against increased body fat in aging women. In addition, fat mass increases as a consequence of aging and menopause in females. However, aromatase, the rate limiting enzyme of androgen to estradiol conversion, is mainly produce in adipocytes (fat cells), where it becomes an important source for estradiol in the postmenopausal period. Thus, the varying levels of estradiol could influence hot flushes in women. Thus, it is important to characterize fat mass in postmenopausal women to determine if body fat percentage influences the severity or frequency of VMS, either spontaneous or induced.
Hot flushes occur spontaneously, which can make it challenging to measure their etiology and physiological responses to them. Because these vasomotor symptoms are strongly connected with CVD, it is important to understand the mechanism by which these symptoms may lead to CVD. Thus, being able to reliably induce a hot flush is key to understanding these mechanisms. Previous research has demonstrated that hot flushes can be induced pharmacologically with yohimbine, an alpha 2 -adrenergic antagonist, and with controlled heating to the torso in symptomatic women, but not asymptomatic women. While measuring physiological responses to hot flushes, the investigators will be able to determine factors that contribute to the greater CVD risk in women who experience VMS.
Importantly, being able to compare the responses of hot flushes to the predictable and known responses to the cold pressor test. The investigators' central hypothesis is that hot flushes can be induced in symptomatic women with a temperature controlled, water heating pad and that BP and HR will be elevated in these women compared with asymptomatic women. If these findings prove to be true, it suggests that women who have vasomotor symptoms may also demonstrate exaggerated responses to stress and this may be occurring frequently in women who experience these debilitating menopausal symptoms.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Participants With Hot Flushes (at least 3 per day)
At Visit 1, participants will complete informed consent, questionnaires regarding medical history, physical activity levels, stress and anxiety, menopause symptoms and a hot flush behavior scale. Visit one will be completed remotely using a HIPAA-compliant online platform or over the phone.
At Visit 2, baseline measurements will be recorded for two hours and spontaneous hot flushes will be detected. Participants will then have a temperature-controlled, water-circulating heating pad at a consistent temperature of 107˚F placed on their torso for 30 min, followed by five min of recovery. This will be followed by a blood draw to measure sex hormones. At either Visit 2 or a separate visit, participants will have a dual energy x-ray absorptiometry scan for a body composition assessment. For participants taking prescribed MHT, a standard protocol for enrollment and they may complete up to six study visits.
Hot Flush Induction
A temperature-controlled, water-circulating heating pad at a constant temperature of 107˚F will be placed on the participant's torso, a microwaved heating neck pad will be placed on the participant's neck, and two warm balloons will be placed in the participant's hands for 30 min. Subjective (verbal start and end point to be marked on LabChart software) and objective (skin conductance and skin temperature) measures of hot flushes will be recorded.
Participants Without Hot Flushes
At Visit 1, participants will complete informed consent, questionnaires regarding medical history, physical activity levels, stress and anxiety, menopause symptoms and a hot flush behavior scale. Visit one will be completed remotely using a HIPAA-compliant online platform or over the phone.
At Visit 2, baseline measurements will be recorded for two hours and spontaneous hot flushes will be detected. Participants will then have a temperature-controlled, water-circulating heating pad at a consistent temperature of 107˚F placed on their torso for 30 min, followed by five min of recovery. This will be followed by a blood draw to measure sex hormones. At either Visit 2 or a separate visit, participants will have a dual energy x-ray absorptiometry scan for a body composition assessment. For participants taking prescribed MHT, a standard protocol for enrollment and they may complete up to six study visits.
Hot Flush Induction
A temperature-controlled, water-circulating heating pad at a constant temperature of 107˚F will be placed on the participant's torso, a microwaved heating neck pad will be placed on the participant's neck, and two warm balloons will be placed in the participant's hands for 30 min. Subjective (verbal start and end point to be marked on LabChart software) and objective (skin conductance and skin temperature) measures of hot flushes will be recorded.
Interventions
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Hot Flush Induction
A temperature-controlled, water-circulating heating pad at a constant temperature of 107˚F will be placed on the participant's torso, a microwaved heating neck pad will be placed on the participant's neck, and two warm balloons will be placed in the participant's hands for 30 min. Subjective (verbal start and end point to be marked on LabChart software) and objective (skin conductance and skin temperature) measures of hot flushes will be recorded.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Have not started hormone therapy and/or will discontinue hormone therapy for the duration of the study
Exclusion Criteria
* Diabetic or asthmatic
* Diagnosed significant carotid stenosis
* History of significant autonomic dysfunction, heart disease, respiratory disease, or severe neurologic condition such as stroke or traumatic brain injury
* Existing metabolic or endocrine abnormalities
* Use of heart/blood pressure medications that are determined to interfere with study outcomes
* Unwilling to discontinue use of OC (or other hormonal contraceptives, including intrauterine devices or contraceptive implants) and/or MHT
* Pregnant or breastfeeding
* Unwilling or unable to refrain from consuming caffeine or alcohol in the 12 hours before visit two or three
* Unwilling or unable to refrain from vigorous exercise (at least 10 minutes in duration) in the 12 hours before visit two or three
* Unwilling or unable to fast in the eight hours before visit two or three
* Body mass index greater than or equal to 35 kg/m\^3
40 Years
70 Years
FEMALE
Yes
Sponsors
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University of Minnesota
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Manda Keller-Ross, PhD, DPT, PT
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Minnesota Medical School Department of Rehabilitation Medicine
Locations
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University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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STUDY00013742
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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