What’s wrong with high blood pressure and high blood sugar in menopause?

The reason why menopausal women are prone to hypertension and hyperglycemia is mainly due to the decrease in ovarian function, the decrease in estrogen, which reduces the stimulating effect of insulin, and the stress capacity of pancreatic islet cells to glucose stimulation, which is also affected and weakened, making the pancreatic gland function low and insulin secretion insufficient, which prevents the oxidation and utilization of sugar and induces diabetes. On the other hand, the phenomenon of obesity is likely to occur during menopause, and obesity can cause the body to produce a large number of anti-insulin substances, reducing the body’s ability to metabolize sugar. In addition, mood swings can also exacerbate the effects. In menopausal women, due to the decline of ovarian function, the level of estrogen decreases and the level of gonadotropin secretion increases, leading to plant nerve disorders and various forms of psychological disorders. These negative emotions can lead to the secretion of a large number of stress hormones in the body, and these hormones are hormones that raise blood glucose and will resist each other with insulin, which is also the reason why menopausal women are prone to diabetes. Also, due to the disturbance of plant nerve function, which leads to poor sleep, emotional instability and irritability, causing an increase in blood pressure or blood pressure fluctuations.