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Menopause and Memory Loss
While you may experience
the misery of hot flashes and mood swings as you enter menopause,
one thing you can't blame on the "change" is memory loss.
In the latest study that exonerates menopause as a cause of
impairing the ability to recall, Taiwanese researchers compared the
memory of hundreds of women before they had any menopausal symptoms
to their memory as they entered menopause.
They found the women who were going through the menopausal process
scored as well or nearly as well on five different cognitive
function tests. Results of the study are to be presented Oct. 4 at
the American Neurological Association annual meeting in Toronto.
"When women go into perimenopause, they don't need to worry about
cognitive decline," said Dr. Jong-Ling Fuh, an attending physician
at Taipei Veterans General Hospital and an associate professor of
Yang-Ming University School of Medicine.
The researchers said the myth of memory loss during menopause is a
perception some women have because as they went through menopause,
they felt their memory wasn't as sharp as it had been before.
Studies suggesting that hormone replacement therapy might protect
against dementia strengthened that belief. However, a large study
later found that in older women, hormone replacement therapy not
only didn't help protect women from dementia, but could actually
increase the risk.
To try to answer the question of whether menopause did have any
effect on memory, Fuh and her colleagues studied nearly 700
premenopausal women living on a group of rural islands between
Taiwan and China. The Taiwanese government restricted access to
these islands until the 1990s, so the authors report that the
study's population was nearly homogeneous, which would help rule out
other potentially causative factors of memory loss.
The women were between the ages of 40 and 54. None of them had had a
hysterectomy, and none took hormone replacement therapy during the
study.
All took five cognitive tests designed to assess their memory and
cognitive skills at the start of the study, and then again 18 months
later.
During the study period, 23 percent of the women began to have
symptoms of menopause.
The researchers then compared the memory of the women who had
entered menopause to those who had not, and found very little
difference. In four of the five tests, there were no statistically
significant differences in the two groups of women.
Only on one test was the difference statistically significant, and
that difference, said Fuh, was very slight. This test was designed
to assess verbal memory and involved showing the women 70
nonsensical figures. Some of the figures were repeated during the
test, while most were not. The women were asked whether they had
seen the figure earlier.
"For women, menopause does not mean you'll develop memory loss,"
said Dr. Raina Ernstoff, an attending neurologist at William
Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich. As you're going through
perimenopause and experiencing symptoms like hot flashes, she said,
you may feel lousy and have trouble sleeping, which might
temporarily affect your cognitive skills.
"I don't think declining estrogen levels are what causes memory
loss," said Dr. Steven Goldstein, an obstetrician/gynecologist at
New York University Medical Center in New York City. "It's not like
your memory is bopping along, doing fine and then takes this big
dive during menopause, like bone density can."
Both Ernstoff and Goldstein said they weren't aware of many women
who believed that menopause might cause significant memory loss.
They also both felt that results from this group of women who were
so homogeneous might not apply to different groups of women, such as
those living in more industrialized society. And they both said that
other factors that weren't studied could play a role in memory loss,
such as hypertension, which can contribute to vascular dementia.
Ernstoff also pointed out that the education backgrounds can play a
large role in memory loss. Fuh acknowledged the researchers did
attempt to control the data for educational differences.
SOURCES: Jong-Ling Fuh, M.D., attending physician, Taipei
Veterans General Hospital, and associate professor, Yang-Ming
University School of Medicine, Taipei, Taiwan; Steven Goldstein, M.D.,
obstetrician/gynecologist, New York University Medical Center, and
professor, obstetrics/gynecology, New York University School of
Medicine, New York City; Raina Ernstoff, M.D., attending
neurologist, William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, Mich., and
member, Alzheimer's Board of Detroit; Oct. 4, 2004, presentation,
American Neurological Association, Toronto.
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