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Review
. 1991;46(3):357-72.

Sex hormones and cardiovascular risk

Affiliations
  • PMID: 1927164
Review

Sex hormones and cardiovascular risk

M L'Hermite. Acta Cardiol. 1991.

Abstract

PIP: The metabolic effects of sex steroids pertinent to cardiovascular risk are described. These effects are discussed for estrogen inducible proteins, coagulation and fibrinolysis, blood pressure and hypertension, carbohydrate metabolism, lipids and lipoproteins, and vessel walls and local prostaglandins. Also described is the cardioprotection from estrogens and estrogen/progesterone treatment and cardiovascular risk. Oral contraceptive (OC) and cardiovascular risk are also discussed with the following effects identified: the influence on many of the multiple risk factors involved in the development of cardiovascular diseases (i.e., lipids, carbohydrate metabolism, and hemostasis), an association between OC use and thromboembolic accidents, a state of hypercoagulability counterbalanced by increased fibrinolytic activity, venous thrombosis, a relationship with the dosage of androgenic progestogens. no atherogenic origin, no age limit for prescribed, healthy, nonsmoking women, and an increased peripheral insulin resistance. It is concluded that it is rarely inadvisable to prescribe low dose natural estrogens in postmenopausal hormone replacement therapy. Factors contraindicating such use are undiagnosed genital bleeding, an active thrombolic or cardiovascular process, carcinoma of the breast or endometrium, and acute liver failure. Estrogen replacement therapy may exert some cardioprotective effect. When progestogens are added to prevent endometrial carcinoma development, the benefits might be reduced. Low estrogen and low progesterone OC use among healthy, nonsmoking women even in middle age poses no risk of death from cardiovascular disease. Premenopausal women may even be protected from coronary atherosclerosis with estrogen-containing OCs. However, it is advisable that OCs be used with the least possible impact on lipid and carbohydrate metabolism, as well as on hemostasis. For those with some prior cardiovascular risk, there are theoretical advantages at present for use of the new, less, or nonandrogenic progestins in OCs; however, caution is urged and informed consent must be obtained until epidemiological studies support this position.

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