Climacteric : the journal of the International Menopause Society
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Long-term corticosteroid therapy is complicated by osteoporosis and generalized thinning of the skin. These two complications of such therapy were routinely assessed at the Menopause Clinic of St. Luke's Hospital Medical School, University of Malta. ⋯ In postmenopausal women taking long-term corticosteroids, skin thickness and bone density were both decreased, but the addition of HRT as add-back improved the situation dramatically. Skin thickness and bone density in women taking long-term corticosteroids were comparable to those in women who had sustained osteoporotic fractures. It is therefore suggested that HRT be used as add-back therapy in postmenopausal women taking long-term corticosteroid therapy.
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The aim of this study was to assess the ability of transvaginal sonography (TVS) and office hysteroscopy with sharp curettage to characterize the morphological changes in the uteri of asymptomatic postmenopausal women taking long-term tamoxifen for breast cancer. The overall acceptability of a single-visit screening clinic for these women was also evaluated. Fifty-eight women were recruited from patients undergoing regular follow-up at the Leicester Royal Infirmary for breast cancer. ⋯ However, hysteroscopy was more effective than TVS in detecting endometrial lesions such as polyps, fibroids and cystic areas. Although TVS detected endometrial thickness greater than 5 mm in the majority of cases, there were no malignancies detected and, for each histopathological classification, there was a wide range of endometrial thickness associated. Thus, the isolated use of TVS is insufficient for screening the endometria of these women.