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Incidence and Risk Factors of Dyslipidemia after Menopause using A Community-Based Prospective Cohort Study

Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2022³â 52±Ç 2È£ p.214 ~ 227
KMID : 0806120220520020214
Á¤Àμ÷ ( Jeong Ihn-Sook ) - Pusan National University College of Nursing

À±Çý¼± ( Yun Hae-Sun ) - Kyungsung University Department of Nursing Science
±è¹¦¼º ( Kim Myo-Sung ) - Dong-Eui University Department of Nursing
ȲÀ±¼± ( Hwang Youn-Sun ) - Dongseo University Department of Nursing

Abstract

Purpose : This study was aimed at investigating the incidence and risk factors of dyslipidemia in menopausal women using a Korean community-based longitudinal study.

Methods : The subjects were 245 postmenopausal women without dyslipidemia who had participated in the Ansan-Ansung cohort study from 2001~2002 (baseline) to 2015~2016 (seventh follow-up visit). The dyslipidemia incidence was measured as incidence proportion (%) and incidence rate per 100 person-years. The predictors of developing dyslipidemia were analyzed with Cox¡¯s proportional hazard model.

Results : The incidence of new dyslipidemia during the follow-up period was 78.4% (192 patients), and 11.9 per 100 person-years. Mean duration from menopause to developing dyslipidemia was 5.3 years in new dyslipidemia cases. The triglyceride/high density lipoprotein (TG/HDL-C) ratio at baseline (hazard ratio = 2.20; 95% confidence interval = 1.39~3.48) was independently associated with developing dyslipidemia.

Conclusion : Dyslipidemia occurs frequently in postmenopausal women, principally within five years after menopause. Therefore, steps must be taken to prevent dyslipidemia immediately after menopause, particularly in women with a high TG/HDL-C ratio at the start of menopause.
KeyWords
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Dyslipidemias, Incidence, Menopause, Risk Factors
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