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)

The objective of this pilot study was to evaluate the effects of conjugated estrogens on the rates of cyclic alternating patterns of sleep (CAPS) and nocturnal hot flushes in symptomatic postmenopausal women. Seven postmenopausal or posthysterectomy women aged 45 to 60 years with nocturnal diaphoresis and/or hot flushes participated in this study. The study was conducted with a single-masked design using a matching placebo. The placebo baseline was followed by a 4-week, single-masked treatment of conjugated estrogens 0.625 mg taken 4 hours before bedtime. Each patient's sleep was monitored in the laboratory for 3 consecutive nights during placebo baseline and again for 3 consecutive nights after an at-home period of at least 24 days of estrogen replacement therapy. Estrogen therapy resulted in a statistically significant decrease in the overall number of hot flushes and the number of hot hot flushes associated with awakenings, as well as improvement in sleep efficiency and a reduction in the rate of CAPS. These data confirm earlier well-established reports that estrogens reduce the frequency of hot flushes and suggest that the frequency of nocturnal arousals decreases and sleep quality improves in conjunction with a reduction in the rate of CAPS.
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PMID:Effects of estrogen replacement therapy on rates of cyclic alternating patterns and hot-flush events during sleep in postmenopausal women: a pilot study. 915 69

The present studies evaluated the effect of estrogens and the selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM) tamoxifen and raloxifene in a rat model for hot flush. In this model, ovariectomized rats were treated for 8 or 9 days either sc or po. Rats were dependent to morphine by implanting a morphine pellet (75 mg each) sc on days 3 and 5 of treatment. On the last day of treatment, a thermistor, connected to a data acquisition system, was placed on the tail of each animal and morphine addiction was withdrawn by naloxone injection (1.0 mg/kg, sc). Temperature measurements were taken for 1 h under ketamine (80 mg/kg, im) anesthesia. In general, vehicle treated rats showed a 5-6 degrees C elevation of their tail skin temperature with the peak occurring about 15 min after naloxone injection. 17 alpha-Ethinyl estradiol (EE) was evaluated both sc and po using a broad range of doses. The IC50 for inhibition of tail skin temperature rise was approximately 0.1 mg/kg, sc and 0.2 mg/kg, po. 17 beta-Estradiol and 17 alpha-estradiol were also active in this model whereas non-estrogenic steroids were inactive. Raloxifene and tamoxifen were tested for estrogen agonist and antagonist activity administered sc and po. Raloxifene did not demonstrate reproducible estrogen agonist activity at doses up to 10 mg/kg, whereas it demonstrated significant antagonistic activity at the 10 mg/kg dose regardless of the route of administration. Tamoxifen exhibited significant estrogen agonist activity at all doses tested (0.1-10.0 mg/kg) and was a significant antagonist of EE at the 1.0 mg/kg dose. Our results demonstrate the potential utility of this model to evaluate and discriminate among classes of compounds with varying degrees of estrogen agonist and antagonist activity.
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PMID:The effect of estrogens and antiestrogens in a rat model for hot flush. 988 31

Menopause and the accompanying reduction in estrogen production may cause a number of symptoms in women which include hot flushes, sweating, mood and sleep disturbances, fatigue and urogenital dysfunction. The effectiveness of estrogen-based hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in ameliorating these symptoms, and in preventing long term sequelae such as osteoporosis, is well established. Comparative trials indicate that oral conjugated estrogens 0.625mg, oral ethinyl estradiol 0.02mg and transdermal estradiol 0.05mg have equivalent efficacy in relief of mild to moderate menopausal symptoms and prevention of bone mineral loss. Concomitant progestogen therapy is usually prescribed for women with intact uteri to protect against endometrial hyperplasia and carcinoma. The addition of progestogen maintains and may even enhance the bone-conserving effects of estrogen, and continuous regimens appear to reduce the incidence of irregular menses. Adverse reactions are predominantly local skin irritation with transdermal preparations (14% of patients) and systemic effects common to most forms of HRT including breast tenderness, flushing, headache and irregular bleeding, occurring in less than or equal to 2% of patients. Data concerning the effect of HRT on quality of life are limited, but most analyses have assigned utility values of 0.99 for mild and 0.95 for severe menopausal symptoms. However, recent clinical data suggest that these utility values may underestimate the impact of menopausal symptoms on quality of life. The cost benefit and cost effectiveness of HRT in the treatment of menopausal symptoms have not been fully researched, although preliminary results suggest that conjugated estrogens and transdermal estradiol compare well with alternative therapies such as veralipride and Chinese medicines. A Swedish study using a prevalence-based approach estimated that estriol treatment in all women with urinary incontinence aged greater than or equal to 65 years resulted in monetary savings compared with treating 20% of women. Cost-utility data indicated that the change in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) with HRT was always positive, but the degree of change was determined by the baseline assumptions. Estimated changes in QALYs with HRT ranged from 0.006 for 5 years of treatment with unopposed estrogen in women with intact uteri, to 0.5 for 10 years of the same treatment in women with severe menopausal symptoms following hysterectomy. Compliance with HRT is suboptimal as 5 to 50% of women withdraw from therapy, thereby increasing costs per year of life saved.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Hormone replacement therapy: I. A pharmacoeconomic appraisal of its therapeutic use in menopausal symptoms and urogenital estrogen deficiency. 1014 33

A new drug class called Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators (SERM) could combine ideal properties for a product designed for menopausal women. The most widely studied member of this class is raloxifene which is currently marketed in several countries for the prevention of osteoporosis in menopaused women. This product is a nonsteroidal derivative of benzothiophene which, like estrogens, has a preventive effect against bone loss involving the spine and peripheral skeleton and a cholesterol lowering effect, both in the ovariectomized rat and in menopausal women. Unlike estrogens, raloxifene does not stimulate breast or uterine tissue. These interesting properties make raloxifene a possible preventive treatment for osteoporosis and other menopause-related risks for menopausal women of all ages. Multicenter studies have been conducted in recently menopausal women who received either raloxifene at the doses of 30, 60, or 150 mg/day or a placebo in a randomized protocol. All subjects were also given calcium supplementation. Bone density was measured twice a year for 36 months by dual X-rays absorptiometry and showed a significant decrease at all sites in the placebo group while there was a significant increase in the spine, the hip and the overall skeleton for all three raloxifen groups. After 24 months of treatment, mean increase over placebo was 2.4% for 60 mg raloxifene measured on the spine and total hip and 2% for the overall skeleton. Markers of bone formation (serum osteocalcin and bone alkaline phasphatase) and resorption (urinary CrossLaps) decreased significantly reaching, after 3 to 6 months of treatment, the levels observed in non menopausal women. In addition, total serum cholesterol as well as LDL-cholesterol decreased significantly in a dose-dependent fashion in all groups treated with raloxifene. Serum HDL-cholesterol and triglycerides did not very significantly during treatment. Hot flashes were the most frequently observed undesirable effect, at a frequency slightly higher in the raloxifene group (25%) than in the placebo group (18%). This undesirable effect was of low intensity and generally occurred during the first months of treatment. It did not cause a higher drop out rate (raloxifen 1.5%; placebo 2.1%). The preliminary data at two years follow-up suggest that raloxifene is not associated with an increased risk of breast cancer. In conclusion, raloxifene is a particularly interesting drug for menopausal women showing very promising efficacy and clinical tolerance.
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PMID:[Results of international clinical trials with raloxifene]. 1052 Apr 16

Hot flushes are experienced in those periods of the female life when estrogen levels are low. Hormone replacement therapy is thus the first choice for treatment of hot flushes. However this treatment is not always accepted or contraindicated for a variety of reasons. Estrogen (and progestogen) strongly interact with a number of neurotransmitters and this has led to a range of non-hormonal treatments including compounds that act via the noradrenergic or dopaminergic systems as well as herbal remedies. These treatments (which are shortly reviewed) are not always successful. Surprisingly, apart from treatment with some selective serotonin (5-HT) reuptake inhibitors (SSRI's), up till now, little attention is given to the strong interaction of estrogens with the serotonergic system. These interactions are shortly reviewed. Based on these interactions, a hypothesis on the genesis of hot flushes is postulated. Especially the 5-HT(2A) receptor subtype may play a key role in the occurrence of hot flushes. A number of arguments that support this hypothesis are discussed.
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PMID:The role of serotonin in hot flushes. 1106 96

Estrogens have been convincingly shown to be highly effective in preventing and reversing menopause-related conditions, such as hot flushes, urogenital complaints, and postmenopausal bone loss. Observational studies report that long-term, estrogen-containing, postmenopausal hormone replacement therapy (HRT) leads to a substantial reduction in hip fractures, myocardial infarction, and possibly colonic cancer, with important consequences for health and quality of life. Estrogen replacement may postpone the onset of Alzheimer's disease and extend life. While many of these effects are biologically plausible, with a variety of cellular mechanisms being involved, only ongoing and future large-scale randomized clinical trials can and should define the effects of HRT more precisely. Long-term compliance is a key issue for long-term benefits, and offering women a choice of administration routes and regimens can only be beneficial in this respect. Pills, patches, gels, and implants are all widely prescribed. Intravaginal or intranasal forms of administration, which are very easy to use and adaptable on an individual level, are among the new options which could improve long-term continuation of HRT use. Fear of breast cancer and recurrence of vaginal bleeding are real concerns for many women considering HRT. This has led to research into lower-dose, estrogen-containing regimens, into continuous combined regimens, and into the potential of estrogen receptor alpha or beta binding molecules that may help to prevent such problems from arising. The prospects for safe and effective postmenopausal HRT with either estrogens or estrogen-like drugs are very promising when these drugs are used in a patient-tailored, risk profile-based manner.
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PMID:Perspectives in hormone replacement therapy. 1139 Jan 23

Hot flashes are the most common symptom of the climacteric, although prevalence estimates are lower in some rural and non-Western areas. The symptoms are characteristic of a heat-dissipation response and consist of sweating on the face, neck, and chest, as well as peripheral vasodilation. Although hot flashes clearly accompany the estrogen withdrawal at menopause, estrogen alone is not responsible since levels do not differ between symptomatic and asymptomatic women. Until recently it was thought that hot flashes were triggered by a sudden, downward resetting of the hypothalamic setpoint, since there was no evidence of increased core body temperature. Evidence obtained using a rapidly responding ingested telemetry pill indicates that the thermoneutral zone, within which sweating, peripheral vasodilation, and shivering do not occur, is virtually nonexistent in symptomatic women but normal (about 0.4 degrees C) in asymptomatic women. The results suggest that small temperature elevations preceding hot flashes acting within a reduced thermoneutral zone constitute the triggering mechanism. Central sympathetic activation is also elevated in symptomatic women which, in animal studies, reduces the thermoneutral zone. Clonidine reduces central sympathetic activation, widens the thermoneutral zone, and ameliorates hot flashes. Estrogen virtually eliminates hot flashes but its mechanism of action is not known.
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PMID:Physiology of hot flashes. 1140 Feb 16

This paper focuses on the question whether different estrogens (E) have different qualitative pharmacodynamic effects when used by women for contraception, Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) or prevention of osteoporosis. In this context estrogens have been defined as the estrogen agonists estradiol (E2), estrone (E1), estriol (E3), conjugated equine estrogens (CEE), diethylstilbestrol (DES) and ethinylestradiol (EE). Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulator's (SERM's) have been excluded from this analysis primarily because of lack of comparative (clinical) data with estrogen agonists. A major problem when addressing the issue of comparability of estrogen agonists is the lack of data from head-to-head estrogen-only comparative studies. Comparative studies have been performed almost exclusively with estrogen agonists combined with a series of different progestogens (P), that have been added to protect the uterus from endometrial hyperplasia. Since progestogens are known to exhibit different intrinsic pharmacodynamic properties and interactions with estrogens, it is impossible to judge which role the estrogen plays when qualitative differences between different combined E/P preparations are observed. In summary, no convincing evidence has been found that the estrogens mentioned differ qualitatively. Obviously quantitative differences are present due to differences in e.g. receptor affinity, metabolism (half life) and route of administration (transdermal/vaginal). Since DES has been discarded for human use due to teratogenicity, EE used in all combined E/P oral contraceptives is the most potent estrogen agonist available at present. In HRT, E2 and CEE are equally effective for the treatment of hot flushes and urogenital atrophy and superior to any other treatment option. For long term treatment to prevent osteoporosis and even for short term HRT, estrogen agonists are heavily debated recently because of a small increased risk of breast cancer, that has been known for a long time already. Well informed and individualised choice of treatment seems the appropriate solution.
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PMID:Are all estrogens the same? 1943 91

Hot flashes are the most prevalent symptom of menopause. Although the etiology of hot flashes has yet to be determined, it is increasingly apparent that the physiology of the underlying vasomotor instability is multifactorial. Estrogen and androgen receptors are present in the areas of the central nervous system relevant to hot flashes. Androgens are central to the synthesis of estrogen and to the bioavailability of free estrogen in peripheral tissues. In addition, androgens have direct central nervous system effects that modulate other endocrine factors associated with hot flashes. The pharmacodynamic differences of testosterone and methyltestosterone are briefly reviewed in the context of choice for individualized clinical use.
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PMID:Hot flashes and androgens: a biological rationale for clinical practice. 1506 32

Hot flashes are the most common symptom of menopause. Although the appearance of hot flashes coincides with estrogen withdrawal, this does not entirely explain the phenomenon because estrogen levels do not differ between symptomatic and asymptomatic women. Luteinizing throughout? hormone pulses do not produce hot flashes nor do changes in endogenous opiates. Recent studies suggest that hot flashes are triggered by small elevations in core body temperature (T(c)) acting within a reduced thermoneutral zone in symptomatic postmenopausal women. This narrowing may be due to elevated central noradrenergic activation, a contention supported by observations that clonidine and some relaxation procedures ameliorate hot flashes. Because hot flashes are triggered by T(c) elevations, procedures to reduce T(c), such as lowering ambient temperature, are beneficial. Estrogen ameliorates hot flashes by increasing the T(c) sweating threshold, although the underlying mechanism is not known. Recent studies of hot flashes during sleep call into question their role in producing sleep disturbance.
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PMID:Pathophysiology and treatment of menopausal hot flashes. 1585 97


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