9 research outputs found

    Hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis homeostasis predicts longevity

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    The reproductive-cell cycle theory of aging posits that reproductive hormone changes associated with menopause and andropause drive senescence via altered cell cycle signaling. Using data from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study (n = 5,034), we analyzed the relationship between longevity and menopause, including other factors that impact ovarian lifespan such as births, oophorectomy, and hormone replacement therapy. We found that later onset of menopause was associated with lower mortality, with and without adjusting for additional factors (years of education, smoking status, body mass index, and marital status). Each year of delayed menopause resulted in a 2.9% reduction in mortality; after including a number of additional controls, the effect was attenuated modestly but remained statistically significant (2.6% reduction in mortality). We also found that no other reproductive parameters assessed added to the prediction of longevity, suggesting that reproductive factors shown to affect longevity elsewhere may be mediated by age of menopause. Thus, surgical and natural menopause at age 40, for example, resulted in identical survival probabilities. These results support the maintenance of the hypothalamic- pituitary-gonadal axis in homeostasis in prolonging human longevity, which provides a coherent framework for understanding the relationship between reproduction and longevity

    Overview and Preliminary Findings 1

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    An earlier version of this paper was presented at the Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Miami Beach, Florida, August 1993. The opinions expressed herein are those The Wisconsin Longitudinal Survey (WLS) is a long-term study of more than 10,000 women and men who graduated from Wisconsin high schools in 1957 and who have been followed for 36 years, to ages 53-54. We briefly review the design, history, and purposes of the WLS, focusing on the design and content of the 1992-93 follow-up surveys. Using preliminary data, we describe the lives of the 1992-93 respondents, with particular emphasis on health and well-being at mid-life. Using data from earlier rounds of th
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