Sunday, July 8, 2007

Gout - women can be affected too!

For hundreds of Years Gout or the word "Gout" was frequently considered a disease of aristocratic men such as Henry VIII, this chronic arthritic disease does not discriminate between men and women, but women generally suffer this arthritic disease later in life.
Both are evenly at danger for this traumatic disorder. In fact, the prevalence of gout in postmenopausal women approaches that of men and tends to climb with each decade of living. And what's much, danger factors for gout, including extra weight and higher blood pressure which are related for both sexes and should be modified accordingly with diet and weight reduction.
According to the American College of Rheumatology in San Diego. Gout is characterized by "flares" marked by fierce pain, redness, inflammation, and passion in the affected joint. Typically, symptoms start in the large toe, but gout may affect new joints. It develops after many years of gradual buildup of uric acidic crystals in the joints and surrounding tissues. In the original survey of 10,000 gout-free women who were followed for 24 years, women who were overweight [system mass indicator (BMI) between 25 and 29. 9] had three times the danger of developing gout as their thinner counterparts, the survey showed. Obese women (defined as a BMI of 30 to 34. 9) had a sixfold increased danger of developing gout, and women with a BMI of much than 35 had 10 times the danger of developing gout as their non obese counterparts. High blood force and the consumption of diuretic medicine also increased a woman's chances of developing gout, according to the survey. Diuretics are known to induce uric acidic levels to increase and are frequently prescribed to handle higher blood force.
This married with the factor that post menopausal women are in a high Gout attack element.