For General Information: (740) 374-1400

24 Hour Nurse Line: (844) 474-6522

Filter by Custom Post Type
About Us
Careers
Community
Locations
Memorial Health Foundation
News
Pages
Patient and Visitors
Providers
Services

X


Mayo Clinic Minute: Women and Alzheimer's Disease

November, 20th, 2024

Summary

Researchers are working to figure out why more women have Alzheimer’s disease than men.


Video


Transcript

Vivien Williams: More women have Alzheimer’s disease than men. Researchers want to find out why.

Kejal Kantarci, M.D.: We are learning that women may have certain risk factors that are specific to them.

Vivien Williams: Dr. Kejal Kantarci says new research focuses on whether reproductive history or exposure to hormone therapy influence a woman’s risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease.

Dr. Kantarci: The study I’m enrolled in involves hormone therapy during menopausal transition and how that affects the brain later life.

Vivien Williams: Dr. Kantarci and her team look for markers of Alzheimer’s disease in brain scans. They also look for changes in brain structure. Thus far, studies show that normal pregnancies and exposure to hormone replacement therapy do not increase cognitive decline.

Dr. Kantarci: Certain hormonal risk factors exist, a reproductive history is an important consideration for women evaluating their Alzheimer’s risk.

Vivien Williams: For the Mayo Clinic News Network, I’m Vivien Williams.


Sign Up For Our Community HealthLine Magazine

Stay informed, inspired, and connected with the Community HealthLine magazine! View past and newest editions conveniently available online, or sign up for a FREE printed version.

Subscribe