Age at menarche and its association with the metabolic syndrome and its components Medizin - Open Access LMU - Teil 17/22

    • Education

The metabolic syndrome is a major public health challenge and identifies persons at risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The aim of this study was to examine the association between age at menarche and the metabolic syndrome (IDF and NCEP ATP III classification) and its components.
1536 women aged 32 to 81 years of the German population based KORA F4 study were investigated. Data was collected by standardized interviews, physical examinations, and whole blood and serum measurements.
Young age at menarche was significantly associated with elevated body mass index (BMI), greater waist circumference, higher fasting glucose levels, and 2 hour glucose (oral glucose tolerance test), even after adjusting for the difference between current BMI and BMI at age 25. The significant effect on elevated triglycerides and systolic blood pressure was attenuated after adjustment for the BMI change. Age at menarche was inversely associated with the metabolic syndrome adjusting for age (p-values: 0.001 IDF, 0.003 NCEP classification) and additional potential confounders including lifestyle and reproductive history factors (p-values: 0.001, 0.005). Associations remain significant when additionally controlling for recollected BMI at age 25 (p-values: 0.008, 0.033) or the BMI change since age 25 (p-values: 0.005, 0.022).
Young age at menarche might play a role in the development of the metabolic syndrome. This association is only partially mediated by weight gain and increased BMI. A history of early menarche may help to identify women at risk for the metabolic syndrome.

The metabolic syndrome is a major public health challenge and identifies persons at risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The aim of this study was to examine the association between age at menarche and the metabolic syndrome (IDF and NCEP ATP III classification) and its components.
1536 women aged 32 to 81 years of the German population based KORA F4 study were investigated. Data was collected by standardized interviews, physical examinations, and whole blood and serum measurements.
Young age at menarche was significantly associated with elevated body mass index (BMI), greater waist circumference, higher fasting glucose levels, and 2 hour glucose (oral glucose tolerance test), even after adjusting for the difference between current BMI and BMI at age 25. The significant effect on elevated triglycerides and systolic blood pressure was attenuated after adjustment for the BMI change. Age at menarche was inversely associated with the metabolic syndrome adjusting for age (p-values: 0.001 IDF, 0.003 NCEP classification) and additional potential confounders including lifestyle and reproductive history factors (p-values: 0.001, 0.005). Associations remain significant when additionally controlling for recollected BMI at age 25 (p-values: 0.008, 0.033) or the BMI change since age 25 (p-values: 0.005, 0.022).
Young age at menarche might play a role in the development of the metabolic syndrome. This association is only partially mediated by weight gain and increased BMI. A history of early menarche may help to identify women at risk for the metabolic syndrome.

Top Podcasts In Education

The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck Podcast
Mark Manson
JIM ROHN
JIM ROHN TALKS
Motivation Daily by Motiversity
Motiversity
The Resilient Mind
The Resilient Mind
Andrew Tate Motivation
Tate Podcast
TED Talks Daily
TED

More by Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München

GK Strafrecht II (A-K) SoSe 2020 Satzger
Helmut Satzger
NANO-BIO-PHYSICS SYMPOSIUM 07.09.2019 Day 2
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
NANO-BIO-PHYSICS SYMPOSIUM 06.09.2019 Day 1
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Center for Advanced Studies (CAS) Research Focus Global Health
Center for Advanced Studies
The Wicked Mu
Stephan Kulla und Nils Hansen
Podcast Jüdische Geschichte
Abteilung für Jüdische Geschichte und Kultur, LMU München