Smoking, current or past, can increase the risk, said researchers from the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden.
The study is the first large-scale (including more than 22,000 postmenopausal women) and long-term study linking early menopause and heart disease.
It was made possible by the Swedish National Patient Register, which captures nearly all Sweden's hospitalisation and outpatient diagnoses; Sweden's Cause of Death Register; and health surveys of some 90,000 women in the Swedish Mammography Cohort, researchers said.
For every one-year increase in age at menopause, the rate of heart failure was 2 per cent lower.
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Smokers are known to go through menopause an average of one year earlier than nonsmokers, but that didn't entirely explain the early menopause-heart failure connection, since women who had smoked earlier in their lives and quit also had an increased rate of heart failure with early menopause, researchers said.
The study was published in Menopause, the journal of The North American Menopause Society (NAMS).