Vaginal oestrogen may relieve painful intercourse. Vaginal oestrogen may help ease dryness and discomfort during intercourse for post-menopausal women who use hormonal replacement therapy and those who don't.
Many women have
been reluctant to use HRT to ease menopause
symptoms since 2002, when the federally-funded Women's Health Initiative (WHI)
study linked the treatments containing man-made versions of the female hormones
oestrogen
and progestin to an increased risk of
breast cancer, heart
attacks and strokes.
For the current
study, researchers compared how well locally-applied oestrogens helped relieve
vaginal pain and dryness among women who stopped HRT after the WHI results came
out, as well as among women who stayed on HRT or resumed treatment after a
temporary halt.
Women were most
likely to use the vaginal oestrogen if they reported pain during sex,
and if they had stopped HRT, the study found.
HRT
rebuilds vaginal walls:-
Among the women
who abandoned HRT and never went back, the participants using vaginal oestrogen
reported significantly higher satisfaction with their sex lives, the study
published in Menopause also found.
"We would
expect that the women with the most severe symptoms would show the greatest
benefit and the group that stopped oestrogen/hormone use after the WHI would be
expected to develop symptoms and benefited the most," senior study author
Dr Michelle Warren, of Columbia University Medical Centre and the Centre for
Menopause, Hormonal Disorders and Women's Health in New York, said by email
Women go through
menopause when they stop menstruating,
which typically happens between ages 45 and 55. As the ovaries curb production
of the hormones oestrogen and progesterone in the years leading up to menopause
and afterwards, women can experience symptoms ranging from irregular periods
and vaginal dryness to mood swings and
insomnia.
Vaginal dryness
and painful intercourse are symptoms thought to result from atrophy of vaginal
tissues because of falling oestrogen levels. HRT has been shown to improve
these symptoms by rebuilding vaginal walls.
Before the WHI
study raised concerns about HRT, millions of women took Prempro, a pill
combining progestin and oestrogen, or Premarin, an oestrogen-only pill. Pfizer
Inc. acquired Wyeth, the maker of Premarin and Prempro, in 2009. Warren has served as a
consultant to Pfizer, but she said the study was designed and conducted without
input from the company.
Study
limited by small size:-
For the study,
Warren and colleagues studied vaginal oestrogen use and sexual health in 310
women in New York City
who were born between 1938 and 1953 and had used HRT for at least five years.
While about 36
percent of women who stopped HRT used vaginal oestrogen, so did around 17
percent of women who continued HRT, the study found.
Overall, roughly a
quarter of women in the study used vaginal oestrogen. The researchers
acknowledge that the study is limited by its small size and the fact that
participants were generally healthy, highly educated women with normal weight,
so the results may not generalise to other groups.
Even so, the
findings suggest that some women may benefit from vaginal oestrogen whether or
not they use HRT, the authors conclude. "Vaginal
oestrogen is safer because very little if any estradiol gets into the blood
stream," Dr Michael Thomas, a researcher in reproductive endocrinology and
infertility at the University
of Cincinnati Medical Centre,
said by email.
Lubricants
may help make sex less painful for women after menopause, but this alternative
can't work like oestrogen to improve the mucous lining of the vagina and make
bleeding and abrasions or tearing less likely during intercourse, added Thomas,
who wasn't involved in the study.
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