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Low testosterone may raise risk of COVID hospitalization
researchers have found.
Low testosterone has long been linked to multiple chronic conditions, including obesity, heart disease, and type 2 diabetes, as well as acute conditions, such as heart attack and stroke. A study published earlier in the pandemic suggested that suppressing the sex hormone might protect against COVID-19. The new study, published in JAMA Network Open, is among the first to suggest a link between low testosterone and the risk for severe COVID.
Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis evaluated data from 723 unvaccinated men who had been infected with SARS-CoV-2. Of those, 116 had been diagnosed with hypogonadism, and 180 were receiving testosterone supplementation.
The study found that men whose testosterone levels were less than 200 ng/dL were 2.4 times more likely to experience a severe case of COVID-19 that required hospitalization than were those with normal levels of the hormone. The study accounted for the fact that participants with low testosterone were also more likely to have comorbidities such as diabetes and obesity.
Paresh Dandona, MD, PhD, distinguished professor of medicine and endocrinology at the State University of New York at Buffalo, called the findings “very exciting” and “fundamental.”
“In the world of hypogonadism, this is the first to show that low testosterone makes you vulnerable” to COVID, added Dr. Dandona, who was not involved with the research.
Men who were receiving hormone replacement therapy were at lower risk of hospitalization, compared with those who were not receiving treatment, the study found.
“Testosterone therapy seemed to negate the harmful effects of COVID,” said Sandeep Dhindsa, MD, an endocrinologist at Saint Louis University and lead author of the study.
Approximately 50% more men have died from confirmed COVID-19 than women since the start of the pandemic, according to the Sex, Gender and COVID-19 Project. Previous findings suggesting that sex may be a risk factor for death from COVID prompted researchers to consider whether hormones may play a role in the increased risk among men and whether treatments that suppress androgen levels could cut hospitalizations, but researchers consistently found that androgen suppression was not effective.
“There are other reasons women might be doing better – they may have followed public health guidelines a lot better,” according to Abhinav Diwan, MD, professor of medicine at Washington University in St. Louis, who helped conduct the new study. “It may be chromosomal and not necessarily just hormonal. The differences between men and women go beyond one factor.”
According to the researchers, the findings do not suggest that hormone therapy be used as a preventive measure against COVID.
“We don’t want patients to get excited and start to ask their doctors for testosterone,” Dr. Dhindsa said.
However, viewing low testosterone as a risk factor for COVID could be considered a shift in thinking for some clinicians, according to Dr. Dandana.
“All obese and all [men with] type 2 diabetes should be tested for testosterone, which is the practice in my clinic right now, even if they have no symptoms,” Dr. Dandana said. “Certainly, those with symptoms [of low testosterone] but no diagnosis, they should be tested, too.”
Participants in the study were infected with SARS-CoV-2 early in 2020, before vaccines were available. The researchers did not assess whether the rate of hospitalizations among participants with low testosterone would be different had they been vaccinated.
“Whatever benefits we saw with testosterone might be minor compared to getting the vaccine,” Dr. Dhindsa said.
Dr. Diwan agreed. “COVID hospitalization continues to be a problem, the strains are evolving, and new vaccines are coming in,” he said. “The bottom line is to get vaccinated.”
Dr. Dhindsa has received personal fees from Bayer and Acerus Pharmaceuticals and grants from Clarus Therapeutics outside the submitted work. Dr. Diwan has served as a consultant for the interpretation of echocardiograms for clinical trials for Clario (previously ERT) and has received nonfinancial support from Dewpoint Therapeutics outside the submitted work. Dr. Dandana has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
researchers have found.
Low testosterone has long been linked to multiple chronic conditions, including obesity, heart disease, and type 2 diabetes, as well as acute conditions, such as heart attack and stroke. A study published earlier in the pandemic suggested that suppressing the sex hormone might protect against COVID-19. The new study, published in JAMA Network Open, is among the first to suggest a link between low testosterone and the risk for severe COVID.
Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis evaluated data from 723 unvaccinated men who had been infected with SARS-CoV-2. Of those, 116 had been diagnosed with hypogonadism, and 180 were receiving testosterone supplementation.
The study found that men whose testosterone levels were less than 200 ng/dL were 2.4 times more likely to experience a severe case of COVID-19 that required hospitalization than were those with normal levels of the hormone. The study accounted for the fact that participants with low testosterone were also more likely to have comorbidities such as diabetes and obesity.
Paresh Dandona, MD, PhD, distinguished professor of medicine and endocrinology at the State University of New York at Buffalo, called the findings “very exciting” and “fundamental.”
“In the world of hypogonadism, this is the first to show that low testosterone makes you vulnerable” to COVID, added Dr. Dandona, who was not involved with the research.
Men who were receiving hormone replacement therapy were at lower risk of hospitalization, compared with those who were not receiving treatment, the study found.
“Testosterone therapy seemed to negate the harmful effects of COVID,” said Sandeep Dhindsa, MD, an endocrinologist at Saint Louis University and lead author of the study.
Approximately 50% more men have died from confirmed COVID-19 than women since the start of the pandemic, according to the Sex, Gender and COVID-19 Project. Previous findings suggesting that sex may be a risk factor for death from COVID prompted researchers to consider whether hormones may play a role in the increased risk among men and whether treatments that suppress androgen levels could cut hospitalizations, but researchers consistently found that androgen suppression was not effective.
“There are other reasons women might be doing better – they may have followed public health guidelines a lot better,” according to Abhinav Diwan, MD, professor of medicine at Washington University in St. Louis, who helped conduct the new study. “It may be chromosomal and not necessarily just hormonal. The differences between men and women go beyond one factor.”
According to the researchers, the findings do not suggest that hormone therapy be used as a preventive measure against COVID.
“We don’t want patients to get excited and start to ask their doctors for testosterone,” Dr. Dhindsa said.
However, viewing low testosterone as a risk factor for COVID could be considered a shift in thinking for some clinicians, according to Dr. Dandana.
“All obese and all [men with] type 2 diabetes should be tested for testosterone, which is the practice in my clinic right now, even if they have no symptoms,” Dr. Dandana said. “Certainly, those with symptoms [of low testosterone] but no diagnosis, they should be tested, too.”
Participants in the study were infected with SARS-CoV-2 early in 2020, before vaccines were available. The researchers did not assess whether the rate of hospitalizations among participants with low testosterone would be different had they been vaccinated.
“Whatever benefits we saw with testosterone might be minor compared to getting the vaccine,” Dr. Dhindsa said.
Dr. Diwan agreed. “COVID hospitalization continues to be a problem, the strains are evolving, and new vaccines are coming in,” he said. “The bottom line is to get vaccinated.”
Dr. Dhindsa has received personal fees from Bayer and Acerus Pharmaceuticals and grants from Clarus Therapeutics outside the submitted work. Dr. Diwan has served as a consultant for the interpretation of echocardiograms for clinical trials for Clario (previously ERT) and has received nonfinancial support from Dewpoint Therapeutics outside the submitted work. Dr. Dandana has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
researchers have found.
Low testosterone has long been linked to multiple chronic conditions, including obesity, heart disease, and type 2 diabetes, as well as acute conditions, such as heart attack and stroke. A study published earlier in the pandemic suggested that suppressing the sex hormone might protect against COVID-19. The new study, published in JAMA Network Open, is among the first to suggest a link between low testosterone and the risk for severe COVID.
Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis evaluated data from 723 unvaccinated men who had been infected with SARS-CoV-2. Of those, 116 had been diagnosed with hypogonadism, and 180 were receiving testosterone supplementation.
The study found that men whose testosterone levels were less than 200 ng/dL were 2.4 times more likely to experience a severe case of COVID-19 that required hospitalization than were those with normal levels of the hormone. The study accounted for the fact that participants with low testosterone were also more likely to have comorbidities such as diabetes and obesity.
Paresh Dandona, MD, PhD, distinguished professor of medicine and endocrinology at the State University of New York at Buffalo, called the findings “very exciting” and “fundamental.”
“In the world of hypogonadism, this is the first to show that low testosterone makes you vulnerable” to COVID, added Dr. Dandona, who was not involved with the research.
Men who were receiving hormone replacement therapy were at lower risk of hospitalization, compared with those who were not receiving treatment, the study found.
“Testosterone therapy seemed to negate the harmful effects of COVID,” said Sandeep Dhindsa, MD, an endocrinologist at Saint Louis University and lead author of the study.
Approximately 50% more men have died from confirmed COVID-19 than women since the start of the pandemic, according to the Sex, Gender and COVID-19 Project. Previous findings suggesting that sex may be a risk factor for death from COVID prompted researchers to consider whether hormones may play a role in the increased risk among men and whether treatments that suppress androgen levels could cut hospitalizations, but researchers consistently found that androgen suppression was not effective.
“There are other reasons women might be doing better – they may have followed public health guidelines a lot better,” according to Abhinav Diwan, MD, professor of medicine at Washington University in St. Louis, who helped conduct the new study. “It may be chromosomal and not necessarily just hormonal. The differences between men and women go beyond one factor.”
According to the researchers, the findings do not suggest that hormone therapy be used as a preventive measure against COVID.
“We don’t want patients to get excited and start to ask their doctors for testosterone,” Dr. Dhindsa said.
However, viewing low testosterone as a risk factor for COVID could be considered a shift in thinking for some clinicians, according to Dr. Dandana.
“All obese and all [men with] type 2 diabetes should be tested for testosterone, which is the practice in my clinic right now, even if they have no symptoms,” Dr. Dandana said. “Certainly, those with symptoms [of low testosterone] but no diagnosis, they should be tested, too.”
Participants in the study were infected with SARS-CoV-2 early in 2020, before vaccines were available. The researchers did not assess whether the rate of hospitalizations among participants with low testosterone would be different had they been vaccinated.
“Whatever benefits we saw with testosterone might be minor compared to getting the vaccine,” Dr. Dhindsa said.
Dr. Diwan agreed. “COVID hospitalization continues to be a problem, the strains are evolving, and new vaccines are coming in,” he said. “The bottom line is to get vaccinated.”
Dr. Dhindsa has received personal fees from Bayer and Acerus Pharmaceuticals and grants from Clarus Therapeutics outside the submitted work. Dr. Diwan has served as a consultant for the interpretation of echocardiograms for clinical trials for Clario (previously ERT) and has received nonfinancial support from Dewpoint Therapeutics outside the submitted work. Dr. Dandana has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM JAMA NETWORK OPEN
Is yoga the answer to pelvic floor woes?
After New York–based yoga instructor Erin Conley’s two sisters gave birth, Ms. Conley suggested a few advanced poses to help strengthen their pelvic floor.
“With one of my sisters, she said, ‘Honestly right now, I just can’t even stand up,’ ” she recalled.
Ms. Conley’s other sister could do slightly more advanced poses – leading Ms. Conley to recognize that after delivery, women’s ability to practice yoga varied widely.
“Post-birth is certainly a progression for each woman,” she said. “You can’t just go into these advance postures.”
Ms. Conley tailored a slow sequence of 30-second poses that each sister could start with, and they eventually reported an improvement of pelvic floor issues. Ms. Conley’s suggestions to her sisters are backed by a small but growing body of research. One study published in August in the journal Urology suggests that yoga may be a way to help treat multiple types of pelvic floor disorders.
More than 1 in 4 women in the United States experience pelvic floor disorders such as bowel or urinary incontinence or pelvic organ prolapse, many as a result of giving birth. But less than 15% of these women seek medical treatment for their symptoms, according to Hari Tunuguntla, MD, associate professor of urologic surgery at Rutgers University’s Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick.
For those who do seek medical help, many patients have trouble complying with initial lifestyle-based recommendations, such as refraining from drinking caffeinated and carbonated beverages, Dr. Tunuguntla said.
“It requires a lot of persistence and knowledge and compliance,” he said.
Medication and physical therapy are routes doctors can order before considering surgery, but some patients find clinical-based interventions to be costly. The cost of the interventions can add up depending on what a person’s insurance policy covers, Dr. Tunuguntla said.
With those struggles in mind, he and his colleagues set out to study the efficacy of the mobile app Yoga of Immortals, which offers a holistic form of yoga that includes postures, breathing exercises, sound therapy, and meditation.
“It includes sound therapy, summative breathing exercise,” Dr. Tunuguntla said. “These are useful not just for the condition but for general well-being.”
For the study, Dr. Tunuguntla and his colleagues emailed surveys to 420 people between ages 18 and 74 years in 23 countries who reported having any type of urinary incontinence, regardless of severity. The participants, most of whom were women, used the yoga app for 30 minutes a day for 8 weeks.
More than three-quarters of participants reported that the frequency and severity of their incontinence improved after 8 weeks of practice, compared with when they started, without having to visit their health care provider. Most participants also said that they felt “very much better” after 8 weeks, compared with when they began the yoga regimen, the researchers found.
The study did not compare the effectiveness of the approach with other standard treatments for incontinence, like physical therapy, medication, or surgery.
Ms. Conley, an instructor since 2010, said that one of the benefits of yoga is building strength and flexibility slowly and simultaneously. She uses yoga poses that focus less on movement and more on holding positions for longer periods of time.
“I’ll do sequences of a mountain pose with a block to activate the core in the most basic ways and really focus on the breathing,” she said.
Another benefit of slower forms of yoga is that they can help participants become more aware of the structures of their pelvic floor, according to Alison Huang, MD, professor of medicine, urology and epidemiology, and biostatistics at University of California, San Francisco.
“In some ways we can think of it as a complementary substitute for rehabilitation therapy,” Dr. Huang said.
Dr. Huang and her colleagues published a short report recently in The Journal of Integrative and Complementary Medicine, showing that even telehealth-based yoga programs for older women with urinary incontinence can offer an accessible way for women of any background to take advantage of yoga’s benefits.
An estimated 93% of 66 participants who practiced yoga through planned telehealth appointments reported feeling “very or moderately satisfied” with their practice. Dr. Huang said that the study is not yet complete but offers a glimpse into some of the advantages of yoga for women with urinary incontinence.
“Any kind of treatment that relies on intensive one-on-one visits with specialists is going to be harder to access for some women,” Dr. Huang told this news organization. “Yoga is typically practiced in a community setting, outside of traditional health care settings.”
The accessibility of yoga and its community-based practice may help eliminate any obstacles to care and compliance that clinicians like she and Dr. Tunuguntla at times experience. Mounting studies have also indicated that yoga may help improve overall wellness, manage stress, promote healthier eating, and benefit a person’s mental and emotional health.
Despite emerging research on the link between yoga and pelvic floor disorders, Dr. Huang said that it’s still early for clinicians to recommend the exercise form for every patient.
“We just don’t have the [solid] evidence to show your pelvic floor will improve,” she said.
“For any woman who is starting out more sedentary, I think there are benefits to practic[ing] yoga for overall health,” Dr. Huang said. “Most clinicians would say there are opportunities to practice yoga regularly in a way that is safe, with a knowledgeable instructor.”
According to Ms. Conley, yoga is only as beneficial as a person’s level of consistency in the practice.
“The dedication to yoga is your willingness to showing up,” she said. “I think depending on your commitment to the practice, if you’re really committed to the practice – just like you show up to physical therapy every day – you will improve,” said Ms. Conley.
“Being gentle and patient with the process is important too,” she said.
Dr. Tunuguntla and coauthors report no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
After New York–based yoga instructor Erin Conley’s two sisters gave birth, Ms. Conley suggested a few advanced poses to help strengthen their pelvic floor.
“With one of my sisters, she said, ‘Honestly right now, I just can’t even stand up,’ ” she recalled.
Ms. Conley’s other sister could do slightly more advanced poses – leading Ms. Conley to recognize that after delivery, women’s ability to practice yoga varied widely.
“Post-birth is certainly a progression for each woman,” she said. “You can’t just go into these advance postures.”
Ms. Conley tailored a slow sequence of 30-second poses that each sister could start with, and they eventually reported an improvement of pelvic floor issues. Ms. Conley’s suggestions to her sisters are backed by a small but growing body of research. One study published in August in the journal Urology suggests that yoga may be a way to help treat multiple types of pelvic floor disorders.
More than 1 in 4 women in the United States experience pelvic floor disorders such as bowel or urinary incontinence or pelvic organ prolapse, many as a result of giving birth. But less than 15% of these women seek medical treatment for their symptoms, according to Hari Tunuguntla, MD, associate professor of urologic surgery at Rutgers University’s Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick.
For those who do seek medical help, many patients have trouble complying with initial lifestyle-based recommendations, such as refraining from drinking caffeinated and carbonated beverages, Dr. Tunuguntla said.
“It requires a lot of persistence and knowledge and compliance,” he said.
Medication and physical therapy are routes doctors can order before considering surgery, but some patients find clinical-based interventions to be costly. The cost of the interventions can add up depending on what a person’s insurance policy covers, Dr. Tunuguntla said.
With those struggles in mind, he and his colleagues set out to study the efficacy of the mobile app Yoga of Immortals, which offers a holistic form of yoga that includes postures, breathing exercises, sound therapy, and meditation.
“It includes sound therapy, summative breathing exercise,” Dr. Tunuguntla said. “These are useful not just for the condition but for general well-being.”
For the study, Dr. Tunuguntla and his colleagues emailed surveys to 420 people between ages 18 and 74 years in 23 countries who reported having any type of urinary incontinence, regardless of severity. The participants, most of whom were women, used the yoga app for 30 minutes a day for 8 weeks.
More than three-quarters of participants reported that the frequency and severity of their incontinence improved after 8 weeks of practice, compared with when they started, without having to visit their health care provider. Most participants also said that they felt “very much better” after 8 weeks, compared with when they began the yoga regimen, the researchers found.
The study did not compare the effectiveness of the approach with other standard treatments for incontinence, like physical therapy, medication, or surgery.
Ms. Conley, an instructor since 2010, said that one of the benefits of yoga is building strength and flexibility slowly and simultaneously. She uses yoga poses that focus less on movement and more on holding positions for longer periods of time.
“I’ll do sequences of a mountain pose with a block to activate the core in the most basic ways and really focus on the breathing,” she said.
Another benefit of slower forms of yoga is that they can help participants become more aware of the structures of their pelvic floor, according to Alison Huang, MD, professor of medicine, urology and epidemiology, and biostatistics at University of California, San Francisco.
“In some ways we can think of it as a complementary substitute for rehabilitation therapy,” Dr. Huang said.
Dr. Huang and her colleagues published a short report recently in The Journal of Integrative and Complementary Medicine, showing that even telehealth-based yoga programs for older women with urinary incontinence can offer an accessible way for women of any background to take advantage of yoga’s benefits.
An estimated 93% of 66 participants who practiced yoga through planned telehealth appointments reported feeling “very or moderately satisfied” with their practice. Dr. Huang said that the study is not yet complete but offers a glimpse into some of the advantages of yoga for women with urinary incontinence.
“Any kind of treatment that relies on intensive one-on-one visits with specialists is going to be harder to access for some women,” Dr. Huang told this news organization. “Yoga is typically practiced in a community setting, outside of traditional health care settings.”
The accessibility of yoga and its community-based practice may help eliminate any obstacles to care and compliance that clinicians like she and Dr. Tunuguntla at times experience. Mounting studies have also indicated that yoga may help improve overall wellness, manage stress, promote healthier eating, and benefit a person’s mental and emotional health.
Despite emerging research on the link between yoga and pelvic floor disorders, Dr. Huang said that it’s still early for clinicians to recommend the exercise form for every patient.
“We just don’t have the [solid] evidence to show your pelvic floor will improve,” she said.
“For any woman who is starting out more sedentary, I think there are benefits to practic[ing] yoga for overall health,” Dr. Huang said. “Most clinicians would say there are opportunities to practice yoga regularly in a way that is safe, with a knowledgeable instructor.”
According to Ms. Conley, yoga is only as beneficial as a person’s level of consistency in the practice.
“The dedication to yoga is your willingness to showing up,” she said. “I think depending on your commitment to the practice, if you’re really committed to the practice – just like you show up to physical therapy every day – you will improve,” said Ms. Conley.
“Being gentle and patient with the process is important too,” she said.
Dr. Tunuguntla and coauthors report no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
After New York–based yoga instructor Erin Conley’s two sisters gave birth, Ms. Conley suggested a few advanced poses to help strengthen their pelvic floor.
“With one of my sisters, she said, ‘Honestly right now, I just can’t even stand up,’ ” she recalled.
Ms. Conley’s other sister could do slightly more advanced poses – leading Ms. Conley to recognize that after delivery, women’s ability to practice yoga varied widely.
“Post-birth is certainly a progression for each woman,” she said. “You can’t just go into these advance postures.”
Ms. Conley tailored a slow sequence of 30-second poses that each sister could start with, and they eventually reported an improvement of pelvic floor issues. Ms. Conley’s suggestions to her sisters are backed by a small but growing body of research. One study published in August in the journal Urology suggests that yoga may be a way to help treat multiple types of pelvic floor disorders.
More than 1 in 4 women in the United States experience pelvic floor disorders such as bowel or urinary incontinence or pelvic organ prolapse, many as a result of giving birth. But less than 15% of these women seek medical treatment for their symptoms, according to Hari Tunuguntla, MD, associate professor of urologic surgery at Rutgers University’s Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick.
For those who do seek medical help, many patients have trouble complying with initial lifestyle-based recommendations, such as refraining from drinking caffeinated and carbonated beverages, Dr. Tunuguntla said.
“It requires a lot of persistence and knowledge and compliance,” he said.
Medication and physical therapy are routes doctors can order before considering surgery, but some patients find clinical-based interventions to be costly. The cost of the interventions can add up depending on what a person’s insurance policy covers, Dr. Tunuguntla said.
With those struggles in mind, he and his colleagues set out to study the efficacy of the mobile app Yoga of Immortals, which offers a holistic form of yoga that includes postures, breathing exercises, sound therapy, and meditation.
“It includes sound therapy, summative breathing exercise,” Dr. Tunuguntla said. “These are useful not just for the condition but for general well-being.”
For the study, Dr. Tunuguntla and his colleagues emailed surveys to 420 people between ages 18 and 74 years in 23 countries who reported having any type of urinary incontinence, regardless of severity. The participants, most of whom were women, used the yoga app for 30 minutes a day for 8 weeks.
More than three-quarters of participants reported that the frequency and severity of their incontinence improved after 8 weeks of practice, compared with when they started, without having to visit their health care provider. Most participants also said that they felt “very much better” after 8 weeks, compared with when they began the yoga regimen, the researchers found.
The study did not compare the effectiveness of the approach with other standard treatments for incontinence, like physical therapy, medication, or surgery.
Ms. Conley, an instructor since 2010, said that one of the benefits of yoga is building strength and flexibility slowly and simultaneously. She uses yoga poses that focus less on movement and more on holding positions for longer periods of time.
“I’ll do sequences of a mountain pose with a block to activate the core in the most basic ways and really focus on the breathing,” she said.
Another benefit of slower forms of yoga is that they can help participants become more aware of the structures of their pelvic floor, according to Alison Huang, MD, professor of medicine, urology and epidemiology, and biostatistics at University of California, San Francisco.
“In some ways we can think of it as a complementary substitute for rehabilitation therapy,” Dr. Huang said.
Dr. Huang and her colleagues published a short report recently in The Journal of Integrative and Complementary Medicine, showing that even telehealth-based yoga programs for older women with urinary incontinence can offer an accessible way for women of any background to take advantage of yoga’s benefits.
An estimated 93% of 66 participants who practiced yoga through planned telehealth appointments reported feeling “very or moderately satisfied” with their practice. Dr. Huang said that the study is not yet complete but offers a glimpse into some of the advantages of yoga for women with urinary incontinence.
“Any kind of treatment that relies on intensive one-on-one visits with specialists is going to be harder to access for some women,” Dr. Huang told this news organization. “Yoga is typically practiced in a community setting, outside of traditional health care settings.”
The accessibility of yoga and its community-based practice may help eliminate any obstacles to care and compliance that clinicians like she and Dr. Tunuguntla at times experience. Mounting studies have also indicated that yoga may help improve overall wellness, manage stress, promote healthier eating, and benefit a person’s mental and emotional health.
Despite emerging research on the link between yoga and pelvic floor disorders, Dr. Huang said that it’s still early for clinicians to recommend the exercise form for every patient.
“We just don’t have the [solid] evidence to show your pelvic floor will improve,” she said.
“For any woman who is starting out more sedentary, I think there are benefits to practic[ing] yoga for overall health,” Dr. Huang said. “Most clinicians would say there are opportunities to practice yoga regularly in a way that is safe, with a knowledgeable instructor.”
According to Ms. Conley, yoga is only as beneficial as a person’s level of consistency in the practice.
“The dedication to yoga is your willingness to showing up,” she said. “I think depending on your commitment to the practice, if you’re really committed to the practice – just like you show up to physical therapy every day – you will improve,” said Ms. Conley.
“Being gentle and patient with the process is important too,” she said.
Dr. Tunuguntla and coauthors report no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
PCOS ups risk of heart complications during delivery period
Pregnant women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) appear to be at significantly increased risk of experiencing cardiac complications while hospitalized during and after delivery.
An estimated 5 million women of childbearing age in the United States have PCOS, a hormone disorder linked to infertility. PCOS is also known to contribute to the development of cardiometabolic abnormalities like high cholesterol and high blood pressure, which are associated with acute cardiovascular complications during delivery.
But a study, published online in the Journal of the American Heart Association, found that even after accounting for pre-eclampsia, age, comorbidities, and race, PCOS was linked to a 76% increased risk for heart failure, a 79% higher risk of a weakened heart, and an 82% increased risk of having blood clots in the hours and days around giving birth in hospital settings, compared with women without PCOS.
“Perhaps women need a closer follow-up during their pregnancy,” said Erin Michos, MD, MHS, associate director of preventive cardiology at Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, and a co-author of the study. “They’re counseled about the difficulties of getting pregnant, but what about when they get pregnant?”
Hospitalizations of women with PCOS were also associated with longer stays (3 vs. 2 days) and higher costs ($4,901 vs. $3616; P < .01), compared with women without PCOS.
Over the 17-year analysis period, the number of women with PCOS rose from 569 per 100,000 deliveries to 15,349 per 100,000 deliveries. The researchers attributed the increase in part to greater awareness and diagnosis of the disorder. Dr. Michos and her colleagues used the National Inpatient Sample, managed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, to pull claims data for women who gave birth in hospitals between 2002 and 2019.
Solutions?
Dr. Michos said there may be more prevention work from og.gyns. to both educate patients about their heart risks during the delivery process and also to refer them to relevant cardiac specialists.
“These women may seek out a gynecologist because of the symptoms, perhaps irregular menses, but along with that should come counseling of the long-term cardiovascular complication,” Dr. Michos said. “And after a pregnancy there should be a good handoff to a primary care provider, so they get a cardiovascular assessment.”
Lifestyle management before, during, and after pregnancy can help prevent the onset of the long-term consequences of cardiac complications during delivery, according to Valerie Baker, MD, director of the division of reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Hopkins Medicine, and her colleagues in a viewpoint published in the journal Fertility and Sterility.
“Once women with PCOS are identified by screening to be at higher risk for [cardiovascular disease], the foundational approach should be lifestyle management followed by statin therapy,” Dr. Baker’s group wrote. “These interventions should include dietary management and physical activity, especially for those who are prediabetic.”
The current study came on the heels of a June 14 meta-analysis by Dr. Michos’ group that found that women with PCOS may be twice as likely as those without PCOS to have coronary artery calcification, a precursor to atherosclerosis and a sign of the early onset of cardiovascular disease.
“We shouldn’t assume that all women of reproductive age are low risk,” Dr. Michos said. “This is the window of time that we can reshape the trajectory early in life.”
The study was supported by the Amato Fund for Women’s Cardiovascular Health research at Johns Hopkins University and through grant support from the American Heart Association (940166). Dr. Michos reported advisory board participation for AstraZeneca, Amarin, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Esperion, and Pfizer. Study coauthor Michael Honigberg, MD, reported consulting fees from CRISPR Therapeutics, unrelated to the present work. The remaining authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Pregnant women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) appear to be at significantly increased risk of experiencing cardiac complications while hospitalized during and after delivery.
An estimated 5 million women of childbearing age in the United States have PCOS, a hormone disorder linked to infertility. PCOS is also known to contribute to the development of cardiometabolic abnormalities like high cholesterol and high blood pressure, which are associated with acute cardiovascular complications during delivery.
But a study, published online in the Journal of the American Heart Association, found that even after accounting for pre-eclampsia, age, comorbidities, and race, PCOS was linked to a 76% increased risk for heart failure, a 79% higher risk of a weakened heart, and an 82% increased risk of having blood clots in the hours and days around giving birth in hospital settings, compared with women without PCOS.
“Perhaps women need a closer follow-up during their pregnancy,” said Erin Michos, MD, MHS, associate director of preventive cardiology at Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, and a co-author of the study. “They’re counseled about the difficulties of getting pregnant, but what about when they get pregnant?”
Hospitalizations of women with PCOS were also associated with longer stays (3 vs. 2 days) and higher costs ($4,901 vs. $3616; P < .01), compared with women without PCOS.
Over the 17-year analysis period, the number of women with PCOS rose from 569 per 100,000 deliveries to 15,349 per 100,000 deliveries. The researchers attributed the increase in part to greater awareness and diagnosis of the disorder. Dr. Michos and her colleagues used the National Inpatient Sample, managed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, to pull claims data for women who gave birth in hospitals between 2002 and 2019.
Solutions?
Dr. Michos said there may be more prevention work from og.gyns. to both educate patients about their heart risks during the delivery process and also to refer them to relevant cardiac specialists.
“These women may seek out a gynecologist because of the symptoms, perhaps irregular menses, but along with that should come counseling of the long-term cardiovascular complication,” Dr. Michos said. “And after a pregnancy there should be a good handoff to a primary care provider, so they get a cardiovascular assessment.”
Lifestyle management before, during, and after pregnancy can help prevent the onset of the long-term consequences of cardiac complications during delivery, according to Valerie Baker, MD, director of the division of reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Hopkins Medicine, and her colleagues in a viewpoint published in the journal Fertility and Sterility.
“Once women with PCOS are identified by screening to be at higher risk for [cardiovascular disease], the foundational approach should be lifestyle management followed by statin therapy,” Dr. Baker’s group wrote. “These interventions should include dietary management and physical activity, especially for those who are prediabetic.”
The current study came on the heels of a June 14 meta-analysis by Dr. Michos’ group that found that women with PCOS may be twice as likely as those without PCOS to have coronary artery calcification, a precursor to atherosclerosis and a sign of the early onset of cardiovascular disease.
“We shouldn’t assume that all women of reproductive age are low risk,” Dr. Michos said. “This is the window of time that we can reshape the trajectory early in life.”
The study was supported by the Amato Fund for Women’s Cardiovascular Health research at Johns Hopkins University and through grant support from the American Heart Association (940166). Dr. Michos reported advisory board participation for AstraZeneca, Amarin, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Esperion, and Pfizer. Study coauthor Michael Honigberg, MD, reported consulting fees from CRISPR Therapeutics, unrelated to the present work. The remaining authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Pregnant women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) appear to be at significantly increased risk of experiencing cardiac complications while hospitalized during and after delivery.
An estimated 5 million women of childbearing age in the United States have PCOS, a hormone disorder linked to infertility. PCOS is also known to contribute to the development of cardiometabolic abnormalities like high cholesterol and high blood pressure, which are associated with acute cardiovascular complications during delivery.
But a study, published online in the Journal of the American Heart Association, found that even after accounting for pre-eclampsia, age, comorbidities, and race, PCOS was linked to a 76% increased risk for heart failure, a 79% higher risk of a weakened heart, and an 82% increased risk of having blood clots in the hours and days around giving birth in hospital settings, compared with women without PCOS.
“Perhaps women need a closer follow-up during their pregnancy,” said Erin Michos, MD, MHS, associate director of preventive cardiology at Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, and a co-author of the study. “They’re counseled about the difficulties of getting pregnant, but what about when they get pregnant?”
Hospitalizations of women with PCOS were also associated with longer stays (3 vs. 2 days) and higher costs ($4,901 vs. $3616; P < .01), compared with women without PCOS.
Over the 17-year analysis period, the number of women with PCOS rose from 569 per 100,000 deliveries to 15,349 per 100,000 deliveries. The researchers attributed the increase in part to greater awareness and diagnosis of the disorder. Dr. Michos and her colleagues used the National Inpatient Sample, managed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, to pull claims data for women who gave birth in hospitals between 2002 and 2019.
Solutions?
Dr. Michos said there may be more prevention work from og.gyns. to both educate patients about their heart risks during the delivery process and also to refer them to relevant cardiac specialists.
“These women may seek out a gynecologist because of the symptoms, perhaps irregular menses, but along with that should come counseling of the long-term cardiovascular complication,” Dr. Michos said. “And after a pregnancy there should be a good handoff to a primary care provider, so they get a cardiovascular assessment.”
Lifestyle management before, during, and after pregnancy can help prevent the onset of the long-term consequences of cardiac complications during delivery, according to Valerie Baker, MD, director of the division of reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Hopkins Medicine, and her colleagues in a viewpoint published in the journal Fertility and Sterility.
“Once women with PCOS are identified by screening to be at higher risk for [cardiovascular disease], the foundational approach should be lifestyle management followed by statin therapy,” Dr. Baker’s group wrote. “These interventions should include dietary management and physical activity, especially for those who are prediabetic.”
The current study came on the heels of a June 14 meta-analysis by Dr. Michos’ group that found that women with PCOS may be twice as likely as those without PCOS to have coronary artery calcification, a precursor to atherosclerosis and a sign of the early onset of cardiovascular disease.
“We shouldn’t assume that all women of reproductive age are low risk,” Dr. Michos said. “This is the window of time that we can reshape the trajectory early in life.”
The study was supported by the Amato Fund for Women’s Cardiovascular Health research at Johns Hopkins University and through grant support from the American Heart Association (940166). Dr. Michos reported advisory board participation for AstraZeneca, Amarin, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Esperion, and Pfizer. Study coauthor Michael Honigberg, MD, reported consulting fees from CRISPR Therapeutics, unrelated to the present work. The remaining authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
New tool may identify pregnant women with eating disorders
A newly developed screening tool may help clinicians identify pregnant women with eating disorders.
The 12-question instrument is intended to be a quick way to help clinicians identify women who may need to be referred to a mental health expert for further evaluation, according to the researchers, who reported on the instrument in a study published in Archives of Women’s Mental Health.
“It would be most appropriate for clinical encounters so that women can get screened and referred,” said Elizabeth Claydon, MD, assistant professor in the department of social and behavioral sciences at West Virginia University’s School of Public Health, Morgantown, who led the study. “If you miss it, they may carry on their eating disorder throughout their pregnancy.”
Pregnant women who have an eating disorder are at increased risk for gestational diabetes, premature birth, labor complications, difficulties nursing, and postpartum depression, according to the National Eating Disorders Association. Their babies are at increased risk for premature birth, low birth weight, and poor development. However, clinicians have not had an accurate way of screening pregnant women who may have an eating disorder.
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists offered its first clinical guidelines for managing anorexia in pregnancy in April 2022. The group’s recommendations include regular monitoring of cardiac and liver function, blood pressure, and heart rate, as well as tests to monitor iron, sodium, potassium, bone density, and blood sugar levels. Anorexia, bulimia, binge eating, and subthreshold disorders – also known as other specified feeding or eating disorders – are among the most common eating disorders among pregnant women.
There are no recent data on the incidence or prevalence of eating disorders among pregnant women, according to Lauren Smolar, vice president of mission and education at the National Eating Disorders Association.
“It’s hard to capture the number of pregnant women affected, since it so often goes undetected,” Ms. Smolar said.
Existing screening tools for eating disorders ask patients whether they’re currently pregnant; a questionnaire specifically tailored to pregnant women may help to better gather data on the prevalence within this group, Ms. Smolar said.
For the new study, Dr. Claydon and her colleagues tested the questionnaire among more than 400 mostly White women aged 25-34 years. They found that it could reliably identify women who may have an eating disorder. The questionnaire was validated for women to take during any trimester, according to the findings.
A score of 39 or above would serve as an indicator for follow-up. Women who score at least 39 were up to 16 times more likely to receive a diagnosis of an eating disorder, compared with women who scored less, the researchers found.
Eating disorders often escape the eye
Researchers developed the tool to screen all women, rather than just patients who present with recognizable symptoms, according to Dr. Claydon.
“Some people may relapse during pregnancy, some may develop [a disorder] while pregnant,” she said. “This makes sure there are no assumptions, because sometimes you can’t tell someone has an eating disorder just by looking at them.”
The researchers also worked to eliminate stigmatizing language to reduce the possibility of women withholding information about their symptoms.
The tool was developed following a qualitative study by Dr. Claydon and her colleagues that was published in 2018. In that study, the researchers analyzed self-perceptions and self-reported experiences of women going through pregnancy with an eating disorder.
“I heard a lot about how difficult it was to disclose eating disorders during pregnancy,” Dr. Claydon said. “It’s wonderful to do something applied to these findings. It’s very meaningful and personal work to me.”
Dr. Claydon said she and her colleagues now plan to test the tool by introducing it into clinics in West Virginia.
The Ophelia Fund/Rhode Island Foundation supported the creation of the tool and dissemination of the tool to clinicians. Research reported in the study was supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
A newly developed screening tool may help clinicians identify pregnant women with eating disorders.
The 12-question instrument is intended to be a quick way to help clinicians identify women who may need to be referred to a mental health expert for further evaluation, according to the researchers, who reported on the instrument in a study published in Archives of Women’s Mental Health.
“It would be most appropriate for clinical encounters so that women can get screened and referred,” said Elizabeth Claydon, MD, assistant professor in the department of social and behavioral sciences at West Virginia University’s School of Public Health, Morgantown, who led the study. “If you miss it, they may carry on their eating disorder throughout their pregnancy.”
Pregnant women who have an eating disorder are at increased risk for gestational diabetes, premature birth, labor complications, difficulties nursing, and postpartum depression, according to the National Eating Disorders Association. Their babies are at increased risk for premature birth, low birth weight, and poor development. However, clinicians have not had an accurate way of screening pregnant women who may have an eating disorder.
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists offered its first clinical guidelines for managing anorexia in pregnancy in April 2022. The group’s recommendations include regular monitoring of cardiac and liver function, blood pressure, and heart rate, as well as tests to monitor iron, sodium, potassium, bone density, and blood sugar levels. Anorexia, bulimia, binge eating, and subthreshold disorders – also known as other specified feeding or eating disorders – are among the most common eating disorders among pregnant women.
There are no recent data on the incidence or prevalence of eating disorders among pregnant women, according to Lauren Smolar, vice president of mission and education at the National Eating Disorders Association.
“It’s hard to capture the number of pregnant women affected, since it so often goes undetected,” Ms. Smolar said.
Existing screening tools for eating disorders ask patients whether they’re currently pregnant; a questionnaire specifically tailored to pregnant women may help to better gather data on the prevalence within this group, Ms. Smolar said.
For the new study, Dr. Claydon and her colleagues tested the questionnaire among more than 400 mostly White women aged 25-34 years. They found that it could reliably identify women who may have an eating disorder. The questionnaire was validated for women to take during any trimester, according to the findings.
A score of 39 or above would serve as an indicator for follow-up. Women who score at least 39 were up to 16 times more likely to receive a diagnosis of an eating disorder, compared with women who scored less, the researchers found.
Eating disorders often escape the eye
Researchers developed the tool to screen all women, rather than just patients who present with recognizable symptoms, according to Dr. Claydon.
“Some people may relapse during pregnancy, some may develop [a disorder] while pregnant,” she said. “This makes sure there are no assumptions, because sometimes you can’t tell someone has an eating disorder just by looking at them.”
The researchers also worked to eliminate stigmatizing language to reduce the possibility of women withholding information about their symptoms.
The tool was developed following a qualitative study by Dr. Claydon and her colleagues that was published in 2018. In that study, the researchers analyzed self-perceptions and self-reported experiences of women going through pregnancy with an eating disorder.
“I heard a lot about how difficult it was to disclose eating disorders during pregnancy,” Dr. Claydon said. “It’s wonderful to do something applied to these findings. It’s very meaningful and personal work to me.”
Dr. Claydon said she and her colleagues now plan to test the tool by introducing it into clinics in West Virginia.
The Ophelia Fund/Rhode Island Foundation supported the creation of the tool and dissemination of the tool to clinicians. Research reported in the study was supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
A newly developed screening tool may help clinicians identify pregnant women with eating disorders.
The 12-question instrument is intended to be a quick way to help clinicians identify women who may need to be referred to a mental health expert for further evaluation, according to the researchers, who reported on the instrument in a study published in Archives of Women’s Mental Health.
“It would be most appropriate for clinical encounters so that women can get screened and referred,” said Elizabeth Claydon, MD, assistant professor in the department of social and behavioral sciences at West Virginia University’s School of Public Health, Morgantown, who led the study. “If you miss it, they may carry on their eating disorder throughout their pregnancy.”
Pregnant women who have an eating disorder are at increased risk for gestational diabetes, premature birth, labor complications, difficulties nursing, and postpartum depression, according to the National Eating Disorders Association. Their babies are at increased risk for premature birth, low birth weight, and poor development. However, clinicians have not had an accurate way of screening pregnant women who may have an eating disorder.
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists offered its first clinical guidelines for managing anorexia in pregnancy in April 2022. The group’s recommendations include regular monitoring of cardiac and liver function, blood pressure, and heart rate, as well as tests to monitor iron, sodium, potassium, bone density, and blood sugar levels. Anorexia, bulimia, binge eating, and subthreshold disorders – also known as other specified feeding or eating disorders – are among the most common eating disorders among pregnant women.
There are no recent data on the incidence or prevalence of eating disorders among pregnant women, according to Lauren Smolar, vice president of mission and education at the National Eating Disorders Association.
“It’s hard to capture the number of pregnant women affected, since it so often goes undetected,” Ms. Smolar said.
Existing screening tools for eating disorders ask patients whether they’re currently pregnant; a questionnaire specifically tailored to pregnant women may help to better gather data on the prevalence within this group, Ms. Smolar said.
For the new study, Dr. Claydon and her colleagues tested the questionnaire among more than 400 mostly White women aged 25-34 years. They found that it could reliably identify women who may have an eating disorder. The questionnaire was validated for women to take during any trimester, according to the findings.
A score of 39 or above would serve as an indicator for follow-up. Women who score at least 39 were up to 16 times more likely to receive a diagnosis of an eating disorder, compared with women who scored less, the researchers found.
Eating disorders often escape the eye
Researchers developed the tool to screen all women, rather than just patients who present with recognizable symptoms, according to Dr. Claydon.
“Some people may relapse during pregnancy, some may develop [a disorder] while pregnant,” she said. “This makes sure there are no assumptions, because sometimes you can’t tell someone has an eating disorder just by looking at them.”
The researchers also worked to eliminate stigmatizing language to reduce the possibility of women withholding information about their symptoms.
The tool was developed following a qualitative study by Dr. Claydon and her colleagues that was published in 2018. In that study, the researchers analyzed self-perceptions and self-reported experiences of women going through pregnancy with an eating disorder.
“I heard a lot about how difficult it was to disclose eating disorders during pregnancy,” Dr. Claydon said. “It’s wonderful to do something applied to these findings. It’s very meaningful and personal work to me.”
Dr. Claydon said she and her colleagues now plan to test the tool by introducing it into clinics in West Virginia.
The Ophelia Fund/Rhode Island Foundation supported the creation of the tool and dissemination of the tool to clinicians. Research reported in the study was supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.