View clinical trials related to Early Menopause.
Filter by:Aging is a common problem in human society at present. The fertility decline, perimenopausal symptoms and senile diseases caused by ovarian aging seriously affect women's own health, offspring's health, family and social stability, and endanger national population security. Accurate stratification of genetic risk of ovarian aging has practical significance. Early and accurate identification of high-risk groups of premature ovarian aging can help such women to start early protection of ovarian function, preserve fertility to a greater extent, improve fertility quality, and also be conducive to early prevention and treatment of other systemic diseases and prognosis.
Women who enter menopause early are at a greater risk for developing cardiovascular disease later in life as compared to women with normal onset of menopause. This increased risk may be due to a prolonged length of time with decreased hormone levels post-menopause; however, this health risk remains understudied. The current study plan to study why women with early menopause are at higher risk for cardiovascular disease by evaluating their sympathetic nervous system and heart-blood vessel function. In addition, there is lack of promising treatment plans for cardiovascular disease in post-menopausal women. Therefore, the current study will also test the impact of dietary nitrate on post-menopausal women to determine if it might serve as a potential treatment to reduce risk of cardiovascular disease in older women.
This study focuses on the phenotyping and genotyping of women with hypergonadotropic ovarian dysfunction (WHO III status).