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What Special Risks do Women Face?
Some risk factors for stroke apply only to women. Primary among these are pregnancy,
childbirth, and menopause. These risk factors are tied to hormonal fluctuations and
changes that affect a woman in different stages of life. Research in the past few decades
has shown that high-dose oral contraceptives, the kind used in the 1960s and 1970s, can
increase the risk of stroke in women. Fortunately, oral contraceptives with high doses of
estrogen are no longer used and have been replaced with safer and more effective oral
contraceptives with lower doses of estrogen. Some studies have shown the newer low-dose
oral contraceptives may not significantly increase the risk of stroke in women.
Other studies have demonstrated that pregnancy and childbirth can put a woman at an
increased risk for stroke. Pregnancy increases the risk of stroke as much as three to 13
times. Of course, the risk of stroke in young women of childbearing years is very small to
begin with, so a moderate increase in risk during pregnancy is still a relatively small
risk. Pregnancy and childbirth cause strokes in approximately eight in 100,000 women.
Unfortunately, 25 percent of strokes during pregnancy end in death, and hemorrhagic
strokes, although rare, are still the leading cause of maternal death in the United
States. Subarachnoid hemorrhage, in particular, causes one to five maternal deaths per
10,000 pregnancies.
A study sponsored by the NINDS showed that the risk of stroke during pregnancy is
greatest in the post-partum period the 6 weeks following childbirth. The risk of
ischemic stroke after pregnancy is about nine times higher and the risk of hemorrhagic
stroke is more than 28 times higher for post-partum women than for women who are not
pregnant or post-partum. The cause is unknown.
In the same way that the hormonal changes during pregnancy and childbirth are
associated with increased risk of stroke, hormonal changes at the end of the childbearing
years can increase the risk of stroke. Several studies have shown that menopause, the end
of a womans reproductive ability marked by the termination of her menstrual cycle,
can increase a womans risk of stroke. Fortunately, some studies have suggested that
hormone replacement therapy can reduce some of the effects of menopause and decrease
stroke risk. Currently, the NINDS is sponsoring the Womens Estrogen for Stroke Trial
(WEST), a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial, to determine whether
estrogen therapy can reduce the risk of death or recurrent stroke in postmenopausal women
who have a history of a recent TIA or non-disabling stroke. The mechanism by which
estrogen can prove beneficial to postmenopausal women could include its role in
cholesterol control. Studies have shown that estrogen acts to increase levels of HDL while
decreasing LDL levels.
Source: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke,
NIH Publication No. 99-2222