(CC) Image: David E. Volk Estrogen steroids, suchas as estrone and estradiol, are produced from androgens such as androstenedione and testosterone.
An estrogen is a type of steroidhormone with eighteen carbons. With increasing age and menopause, the levels of estrogens decrease in women, and estrogen replacement therapy has been used for decades to decrease the systoms associated with menopause. However, recent studies suggest that estrogen replacement therapy increases the risks of heart attacks and strokes, so its use is now declining. The steroids estrone and estradiol are both estrogens.
The estrogens are biosynthesized, by several chemical modifications of androgens. The C-3 ketone group is reduced to an alcohol, the C-19 methyl group is removed and the "A" ring (see steroid for numbering and nomenclature) becomes an aromatic ring.
Originally thought to reduce vascular disease[1], the increase in cardiovascular mortality observed during the HERS[2] and Women's Health Initiative (WHI) [3][4]randomized controlled trials has led several practitioners to cease recommending hormone replacement therapy to most of their menopausal patients.[5]
There is conflicting evidence regarding increased risk of cardiovascular disease among women who start hormone replacement therapy soon after menopause. These patients may[6] or may not[7] be at increased risk of harms. Thus HRT may be an acceptable treatment of vasomotor symptoms in women less than 60 years old, have been menopausal for less than 10 years, are treated with statins, and have a lipid profile and a body weight that are satisfactory. This combination of factors is not rare.[8] In addition, women with risk of thrombotic disease should avoid HRT.[9]
The adverse outcomes seen in the WHI trial are not necessarily direct consequences of the treatment, but can result from an exacerbation by estrogen and progestogen of other abnormalities associated with menopause, aging or other factors. Seelig & al have explained how the grossly abnormal calcium:magnesium ratio seen in most of the women who participated to the trial (and most age-matched women in the USA, for instance) likely caused the adverse events; estrogen function depends on normal tissue magnesium concentrations and calcium:magnesium ratios.[10]
↑Austin PC, Mamdani MM, Tu K, Jaakkimainen L (2003). "Prescriptions for estrogen replacement therapy in Ontario before and after publication of the Women's Health Initiative Study". JAMA289 (24): 3241–2. DOI:10.1001/jama.289.24.3241. PMID 12824204. Research Blogging.
↑Prentice RL et al. Benefits and risks of postmenopausal hormone therapy when it is initiated soon after menopause. Am J Epidemiol. 2009 Jul 1;170(1):12-23. PMID 19468079