Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0600142 (hot flushes)
1,242 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Periods of intense hormonal fluctuations have been associated with heightened prevalence and exacerbation of underlying psychiatric illness, particularly the occurrence of premenstrual dysphoria, puerperal depression and depressive symptoms during perimenopause. It has been speculated that sex steroids such as estrogens, progestogens, testosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) exert a significant modulation of brain functioning, possibly through interactions with various neurotransmitter systems. It is therefore intuitive that abrupt alterations of these hormones would interfere with mood and behaviour. On the other hand, accumulating data suggest that hormonal interventions may also promote relief or even remission of depressive symptoms, as already demonstrated in studies with patients experiencing postpartum depression and perimenopausal depressive disorders. The extent to which perimenopause, alone, may increase the risk for depression is unclear. However, existing data strongly suggest that some women are particularly vulnerable to developing significant physical and psychological disturbances when entering perimenopause. This article reviews the effect of sex hormones and selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) on mood among peri- and postmenopausal women. There are preliminary, though promising, data on the use of estradiol (particularly transdermal estradiol) to alleviate depression during perimenopause, use of a combination of estrogens and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors for depression during the postmenopausal period, and the use of testosterone to improve psychological well-being and increase libido among women with induced menopause. Further studies would help to better delineate the usage of hormones as an antidepressant strategy (monotherapy or augmenting treatment) for peri- and postmenopausal women. A brief review of some nonhormonal interventions for the treatment of menopause-related symptoms that may significantly affect a woman's quality of life is also presented. There are some preliminary data suggesting the efficacy of antidepressants for the treatment of hot flushes; existing data on diet supplements and herbal products have shown more mixed results.
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PMID:Effect of reproductive hormones and selective estrogen receptor modulators on mood during menopause. 1253 10

Health care professionals in modern Western societies will meet an increasing number of women surviving breast cancer. How the menopause of these women should be treated is still an open question. Use of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) may, at least in theory, increase the risk for recurrence of cancer, but its categoric refusal is a double-edged sword because it also denies these women all the undisputable health benefits HRT provides. This refusal is not, however, supported by the observational data available so far on this question, because HRT has not increased the risk for breast cancer recurrence. In fact, it is well established that HRT abolishes hot flushes and improves significantly these patients' quality of life. At present, we have no effective nonhormonal alternatives for the control of vasomotor symptoms, and the efficacy of phytoestrogens in the treatment of menopausal symptoms is unproven. Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) which protect against osteoporosis and perhaps also against breast cancer, and which may have beneficial effects on the cardiovascular system, aggravate hot flushes and are therefore not useful, at least in the first postmenopausal years. In some countries, progestins are often prescribed for the control of such patients' vasomotor symptoms, but their safety has never been assessed in clinical trials, and in theory they can be harmful. Randomized clinical trials (RCT) on the use of HRT in breast cancer survivors are underway, but their completion will take years, and even these may be open to criticism. Tibolone may appear to be an appealing alternative for HRT, but it should also be studied with RCTs in this indication. At present, a patient with a history of breast cancer must be given balanced information as to the possible benefits and risks of HRT, and she herself must make the decision whether or not to start HRT.
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PMID:Hormone replacement therapy in women with a history of breast cancer. 1262 34

All androgens and estrogens in post-menopausal women are synthesized locally in peripheral target tissues by tissue-specific steroidogenic enzymes according to the intracrine process. The importance of the intracrine or peripheral formation of sex steroids is illustrated by the success of aromatase inhibitors and antiestrogens in the prevention and treatment of breast cancer in post-menopausal women. On the other hand, a large series of problems are associated with the deficiency of sex steroids accompanying menopause and the decreased secretion of DHEA, osteoporosis being the best defined example. In this context, an important observation is that women at menopause are not only deprived from ovarian estrogens but are also lacking androgens due to the marked decrease of DHEA. In order to achieve a more physiological and tissue-specific hormone replacement therapy, DHEA, in combination with a SERM (selective estrogen receptor modulator) having pure antiestrogenic activity in the mammary gland and uterus could possibly meet the most important needs of women at menopause, namely control of hot flushes and, most importantly, prevent breast cancer, uterine cancer, ovarian cancer and osteoporosis with a potential improvement of cognitive functions and memory and prevention of Alzheimer's disease.
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PMID:Extragonadal synthesis of sex steroids: intracrinology. 1277 42

Soy has received attention as an alternative to conventional hormone replacement therapy (HRT) largely because it is a unique dietary source of isoflavones. Isoflavones are diphenolic compounds that have both hormonal and nonhormonal properties and are considered to be selective estrogen receptor modulators. The estrogen-like effects of isoflavones in combination with the low reported frequency of hot flushes in Japan has prompted investigation of the effect of soy on menopausal symptoms. The purpose of this review is to evaluate the efficacy of soyfoods and isoflavone supplements for the alleviation of hot flushes. Nineteen trials (13 using a parallel design) involving more than 1,700 women were identified. Six trials were excluded from analysis: two that involved breast cancer patients, two that reported data on severity but not hot flush frequency, one that was not blinded, and one that did not include a control group. Based on a simple regression analysis of the remaining data set (13 trials), there was a statistically significant relationship (P =.01) between initial hot flush frequency and treatment efficacy. Initial hot flush frequency explained about 46% of the treatment effects, and hot flush frequency decreased by about 5% (above placebo or control effects) for every additional initial hot flush per day in women whose initial hot flush frequency was five or more per day. Although conclusions based on this analysis should be considered tentative, the available data justify the recommendation that patients with frequent hot flushes consider trying soyfoods or isoflavone supplements for the alleviation of their symptoms.
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PMID:Efficacy of soyfoods and soybean isoflavone supplements for alleviating menopausal symptoms is positively related to initial hot flush frequency. 1280 15

In our studies of the development of a novel class of selective estrogen receptor modulators, (+)-3-[4-(1-piperidinoethoxy)phenyl]spiro[indene-1,1'-indane]-5,5'-diol hydrochloride (1) was found to be an estrogen receptor ligand with beneficial effects in rat models for human hot flush. Moreover, 1 was found to have beneficial effects on lipid and bone metabolism while maintaining marginal effects on the uterus and breasts. These findings suggest that 1 would provide a new treatment for hot flush.
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PMID:Discovery and preclinical characterization of (+)-3-[4-(1- piperidinoethoxy)phenyl]spiro[indene- 1,1'-indane]-5,5'-diol hydrochloride: a promising nonsteroidal estrogen receptor agonist for hot flush. 1295 49

The Women's Health Initiative Study and other reports have created major uncertainty among postmenopausal women and physicians concerning hormone replacement therapy. We have thus investigated the possibility of replacing the progestin in hormone replacement therapy by a novel selective estrogen receptor (ER) modulator having potent and pure antiestrogenic activity in the mammary gland and uterus. As measured by changes in histology and Cdc47 labeling in the rat model, the present study shows that the stimulatory effect of estradiol in the mammary gland and uterus is efficiently blocked by simultaneous administration of the novel selective ER modulator EM-652, but bone mineral density is preserved and serum cholesterol is decreased. After the administration of 14C-labeled EM-652, we observed that there is no detectable radioactivity in the brain. Moreover, ER alpha immunoreactivity remained constant in the hypothalamus after EM-652 treatment, whereas ER alpha became almost undetectable in the mammary gland and uterus. The present data show the poor or absent access of EM-652 to the brain, whereas the effects of estrogens are efficiently neutralized in the mammary gland and uterus. Such data support the exciting possibility of a novel approach that could meet most of the needs of women's health at menopause, namely control of hot flushes and prevention of breast, uterine, and ovarian cancer as well as osteoporosis and potentially helping brain function and preventing Alzheimer's disease with no identifiable risk or negative effect.
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PMID:The combination of a novel selective estrogen receptor modulator with an estrogen protects the mammary gland and uterus in a rodent model: the future of postmenopausal women's health? 1457 21

Belamcanda chinensis (BC) belongs to the family of iridaceae and the isoflavone tectorigenin has been isolated from the rhizome of this plant. Whether this isoflavone has estrogenic, possibly selective estrogen receptor modulator activities and if so, whether they are mediated via the estrogen receptor alpha or beta is unknown at present. Therefore, we performed binding studies with recombinant human ERalpha and ERbeta to show that tectorigenin binds to both receptor subtypes. In ERalpha-expressing MCF7 and ERbeta-expressing MDA-MB231 reporter gene transfected cells tectorigenin causes transactivation. When given intravenously to ovariectomized (ovx) rats, it inhibits pulsatile pituitary LH secretion. In postmenopausal women estrogen-unopposed LH pulses correlate with hot flushes. Therefore, suppression of pulsatile LH secretion may be beneficial in women suffering from hot flushes. Upon chronic application to ovx rats a BC extract containing 5% Belamcanda at a daily dose of 33 mg or 130 mg of the extract had no effect on uterine weight or on estrogen-regulated uterine gene expression while estrogenic effects in the bone, on bone mineral density of the metaphysis of the tibia could be established. Hence, tectorigenin may have antiosteoporotic effects also in postmenopausal women. Immunohistochemical staining of proliferating cell nuclear antigen--a proliferation marker--in the mammary gland did not indicate a mammotrophic effect of the tectorigenin-containing BC extract at both tested doses. In summary, tectorigenin or the B. chinensis extract containing tectorigenin had a strong hypothalamotropic and osteotropic effect but no effect in the uterus or the mammary gland. Therefore, tectorigenin may be in the future a clinically useful selective estrogen receptor modulator.
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PMID:Belamcanda chinensis and the thereof purified tectorigenin have selective estrogen receptor modulator activities. 1533 Apr 94

Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) are a diverse group of non-steroidal (non hormonal) compounds developed to offer the postmenopausal women many of the advantages of estrogen therapy (ET) while avoiding undesired effects on reproductive and other tissues. Tamoxifen and toremifene, first generation SERMs are used for the adjuvant treatment of breast cancer worldwide, but their stimulatory effect on the uterus prevents their widespread use in other indications. A second generation SERM, raloxifene hydrochloride, a benzothiophene SERM is fully safe for the uterus and significantly reduces the risk of vertebral fractures in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis. The safety and efficacy of raloxifene in postmenopausal women have been studied extensively in more than 40,000 women over 50 clinical trials in 30 countries. The majority of the trials have been large double-blind placebo-controlled trials, including Asia and Japan. Raloxifene is well tolerated, with the only common side effects significantly higher than placebo being hot flushes and minor leg cramps. Venous thromboembolism was the only adverse events of clinical significance but rare associated with raloxifene in Caucasian women, but was not observed so far in Asian countries.
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PMID:[Safety profile of raloxifene]. 1557 39

Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT), once considered as the gold standard of treatment of menopausal symptoms and osteoporosis, introduced about seventy years ago still continuing with lot of controversies. Menopause, a transitional period of women's life, is not an illness when oestrogen level falls leading to its consequences. Results of earlier observational studies showed beneficial effects of HRT including cardiovascular protection. But all recent randomized controlled trials have failed to prove these positive effects, rather increases the cardiovascular risk and breast cancer. Women's Health Initiative(WHI), one of the recent randomized controlled trials was stopped prematurely in 2002 due to unfavorable risk-benefit ratio. HRT is not the only way of treating the menopausal symptoms and other consequences of estrogen deficiency. There are suitable alternatives without bearing the risk of HRT. Vasomotor symptoms with hot flushes and sweating experienced by about 75 percent of menopausal women can be treated with alternatives like phyto-estrogens, selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs), clonidine, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, acupuncture, exercise, behavioral therapy etc. HRT is no longer considered as the first line of treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis. It can be treated with alternatives like regular weight bearing exercise, balanced calcium rich diet, maintaining weight, avoidance of bone robbers, (like excess alcohol, caffeine, smoking), use of SERMs etc. Use of HRT should be individualized and rationalized considering its risks and benefits.
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PMID:Evaluation of hormone replacement therapy. 1605 16

Multiple issues regarding the efficacy of estrogen action in the brain remain unresolved. These include the timing, formulation and duration of the therapy intervention. Moreover, issues of thrombotic and neoplastic risks must be factored into the design of estrogen alternatives developed to prevent age-associated neurodegenerative disorders, as well as other climacteric symptoms such as hot flush and sleep dysfunction. One strategy to address these issues is to develop molecules that selectively target and activate estrogen mechanisms of action in the brain while avoiding activation of estrogen receptors peripheral to the brain, particularly in reproductive organs. An overview of recent advances in our understanding of the molecular mechanisms of estrogen action is discussed in the context of designing an efficacious NeuroSERM that will activate cellular, biochemical and genomic events required for the promotion of memory function and neuronal survival. Pharmacological analyses of estrogen receptor subtypes and the case for a membrane-associated estrogen receptor splice variant in mediating these mechanisms are provided along with a summary of the activation profiles of existing clinically relevant estrogen alternatives or SERMs in neurons. Results of these endeavors have yielded insights into strategies for developing novel molecules with NeuroSERM potential in order to prevent brain related climacteric symptoms and neurodegenerative diseases.
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PMID:Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) for the brain: current status and remaining challenges for developing NeuroSERMs. 1626 15


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