Sixth
Annual Grant Winners 2005-2006
Harvey Mayrovitz, Ph.D. – HPD College of Medicine
Dawn Brown-Cross, Ed.D. – HPD College of Allied Health
Dean Anthony Silvagni – College of Osteopathic Medicine
Dean Richard Davis – College of Allied Health
Title: The Effects of
Sex Hormones on Tissue Water Content and Skin Blood Flow:
Implications for Therapy of Premenopausal Women with Postmastectomy
Arm Lymphedema
Abstract:
Lymphedema and arm swelling after surgery
and/or radiotherapy for breast cancer is a major complication
in about 30% of breast cancer survivors. When this occurs
in premenopausal women, a hypothesized complicating factor
is a sex hormone related increase in interstitial fluid volume,
that we believe causes hormone-dependent increases in arm
tissue water that exacerbates the edema of the lymphedematous
limb. Such effects have important implications for therapy
and skin blood flow. Our goal is to test this hypothesis
in healthy premenopausal women to determine the extent of
sex hormone impacts on arm tissue water, volume and skin
blood flow, and to compare these parameters to those obtained
in postmenopausal women, in whom both estrogen (E) and progesterone
(P) values are much reduced. To accomplish this, arm tissue
water, volume and skin blood flow will be measured at three
time points during the menstrual cycle in 30 premenopausal
women. The time points will be on cycle-day 4 (low E and
low P), cycle-day 12 (high E and low P), and cycle-day 22
(high E and high P). Values of E and P will be determined
with saliva assays. Day 4 parameter values will be compared
to those obtained from 15 postmenopausal women. This study’s
significance relates to its potential to provide a foundation
to develop rationally based new or modified strategies to
treat lymphedematous limbs in premenopausal women. Without
this initial study of normal limbs, investigations of lymphedematous
limbs would not be scientifically based. In addition to its
potential relevance to lymphedema, this study will provide
a basic physiological characterization of the relationship
between premenstrual hormone changes and tissue water content.
The significance of the pre- versus postmenopausal comparison
relates to the quantitative information that will emerge
regarding the role of hormones in age-related changes in
skin moisture and blood flow.
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