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Comparative Study
. 2002 Nov;50(11):1826-30.
doi: 10.1046/j.1532-5415.2002.50511.x.

Mood symptoms and cognitive performance in women estrogen users and nonusers and men

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Comparative Study

Mood symptoms and cognitive performance in women estrogen users and nonusers and men

Karen J Miller et al. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2002 Nov.

Abstract

Objectives: Previous studies have suggested sex differences in mood and cognition and that estrogen effects may partially explain such differences. In this study, we explore sex differences for a range of mood symptoms and for neuropsychological performance in men and postmenopausal women and assess the potential influence of estrogen on these measures.

Design: Cross-sectional study of men and women examining mood, neuropsychological test data, and estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) use.

Setting: Outpatient study at an urban teaching hospital with subjects recruited from the community.

Participants: All subjects (N = 96) were between the ages of 57 and 75 and included 31 women using ERT, 16 non-ERT users, and 49 men. Subjects did not have major depression and were nondemented.

Measurement: The three groups were compared according to profile of mood states and neuropsychological performance, and statistical analyses were controlled for socioeconomic status, age, and education level.

Results: Female ERT users were less depressed and less angry and performed better on measures of verbal fluency and working memory than the other subject groups.

Conclusion: Postmenopausal estrogen use is associated with better mood and cognitive performance on tasks of fluency and working memory. These results suggest that estrogen should be examined as a potentially critical variable influencing late-life sex differences in mood and cognition.

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