Even though exercise has proven health benefits, easing hot flashes isn't one of them, a new study suggests.
After participating in a 12-week aerobic exercise program, sedentary women with frequent hot flashes had no fewer or less bothersome hot flashes than a control group.
The 248 women in the trial, from the MsFLASH Research Network, were either approaching menopause or were postmenopausal; 142 of them continued to go about their usual activities, and 106 participated in aerobic exercise training three times a week for 12 weeks at a fitness center.
All the women kept daily diaries on their hot flashes and night sweats and on how well they slept and also completed questionnaires about insomnia, depression, and anxiety.
Although exercise had small positive effects on sleep quality, insomnia, and depression, it had no significant effect on hot flashes for the women overall.
Race and initial fitness did make some difference, however.
White women in the exercise program did show improvement in their hot flashes compared with white women who maintained their usual activity level, but there was no similar difference among African-American women.
Also, women who were more fit to begin with had greater improvement in their hot flashes with exercise.
"Midlife women cannot expect exercise to relieve [hot flashes and night sweats] but may reasonably expect it to improve how they feel and their overall health," the investigators said.
The study is published in Menopause, the journal of The North American Menopause Society.
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