According to the study of "Climacteric symptoms among Japanese women and men: comparison of four symptom checklists" by Melby MK., posted in US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health, researcher filed the result in abstract that 32 women and 22 men (mean age 48.7 years) provided complete questionnaires. Although males had higher prevalence of stress, irritability, and nervousness (p < 0.05), no men reported having kōnenki. Four of eight female symptom factors exhibited significant correlations with kōnenki status. All symptom index scores were lower in pre-kōnenki women than in peri-kōnenki women, but scores for men and women did not differ. Soy intake and Lock score were negatively correlated among women.
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Thursday, September 29, 2011
Soy and Climacteric Symptoms
Posted by Chantel M. Contributed by US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health
According to the study of "Climacteric symptoms among Japanese women and men: comparison of four symptom checklists" by Melby MK., posted in US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health, researcher filed the result in abstract that 32 women and 22 men (mean age 48.7 years) provided complete questionnaires. Although males had higher prevalence of stress, irritability, and nervousness (p < 0.05), no men reported having kōnenki. Four of eight female symptom factors exhibited significant correlations with kōnenki status. All symptom index scores were lower in pre-kōnenki women than in peri-kōnenki women, but scores for men and women did not differ. Soy intake and Lock score were negatively correlated among women.
According to the study of "Climacteric symptoms among Japanese women and men: comparison of four symptom checklists" by Melby MK., posted in US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health, researcher filed the result in abstract that 32 women and 22 men (mean age 48.7 years) provided complete questionnaires. Although males had higher prevalence of stress, irritability, and nervousness (p < 0.05), no men reported having kōnenki. Four of eight female symptom factors exhibited significant correlations with kōnenki status. All symptom index scores were lower in pre-kōnenki women than in peri-kōnenki women, but scores for men and women did not differ. Soy intake and Lock score were negatively correlated among women.
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