https://www.selleckchem.com/products/cc-885.html After adjustment for all possible confounding factors, women without a spouse had a 1.62-fold increased hazard for significant CAD in multivariate regression analysis. CONCLUSIONS In contrast to men, a without spouse status is independently associated with significant CAD in women experiencing chest pain. Women with a spouse had the lowest presence of CAD among all groups. In the management of female patients experiencing chest pain, clinicians should consider their social characteristics, including marital status, to predict subsequent cardiovascular disease and determine the appropriate treatment. Video Summaryhttp//links.lww.com/MENO/A567.OBJECTIVE The objective of this study was to translate the Menopause-specific Quality of Life (MENQOL) questionnaire in Greek and validate it for usage in the Greek population both in written and electronic form. METHODS The original English questionnaire MENQOL with 1-month recall period was translated by our team. According to instructions by Mapi Research Trust, the questionnaire was forward and back-translated, followed by patient testing and proofreading. Then it was transcripted electronically. Validation was performed with the following tests internal consistency (reliability), stability (test-retest reliability) with Cronbach's alpha correlations, independent and paired t tests, and Pearson's correlation coefficients. RESULTS A total of 105 women, the majority recently menopausal, participated in the study. Internal consistency using the Cronbach's alpha showed high reliability ranging between 0.833 (physical domain) and 0.896 (vasomotor domain) for the written, and 0.720 (physical domain) and 0.868 (vasomotor domain) for the online form. Test-retest reliability was also high for both forms. The sexual domain of MENQOL had the higher mean, indicating the highest impact on quality of life (3.80 ± 2.35). CONCLUSIONS The Greek version of MENQOL is a reliable instrument for ev