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Review
. 2009 Dec;22(4):205-14.
doi: 10.1097/WNN.0b013e3181a74ce7.

Aging, estrogens, and episodic memory in women

Affiliations
Review

Aging, estrogens, and episodic memory in women

Victor W Henderson. Cogn Behav Neurol. 2009 Dec.

Abstract

Objective: To review the relation in midlife and beyond between estrogen exposures and episodic memory in women.

Background: Episodic memory performance declines with usual aging, and impairments in episodic memory often portend the development of Alzheimer disease. In the laboratory, estradiol influences hippocampal function and animal learning. However, it is controversial whether estrogens affect memory after a woman's reproductive years.

Method: Focused literature review, including a summary of a systematic search of clinical trials of estrogens in which outcomes included an objective measure of episodic memory.

Results: The natural menopause transition is not associated with the objective changes in episodic memory. Strong clinical trial evidence indicates that initiating estrogen-containing hormone therapy after the age of about 60 years does not benefit episodic memory. Clinical trial findings in middle-aged women before the age of 60 years are limited by smaller sample sizes and shorter treatment durations, but these also do not indicate substantial memory effects. Limited short-term evidence, however, suggests that estrogens may improve verbal memory after surgical menopause. Although hormone therapy initiation in old age increases dementia risk, observational studies raise the question of an early critical window during which midlife estrogen therapy reduces late-life Alzheimer disease. However, almost no data address whether midlife estrogen therapy affects episodic memory in old age.

Conclusions: Episodic memory is not substantially impacted by the natural menopause transition or improved by the use of estrogen-containing hormone therapy after the age of 60 years. Further research is needed to determine whether outcomes differ after surgical menopause or whether episodic memory later in life is modified by midlife estrogenic exposures.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00114517 NCT00154180.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Reproductive stage and episodic memory in the Melbourne Women's Midlife Health Project
Based on 250 women aged 52-63 without surgical menopause and not using hormone therapy (see Henderson et al41). Early postmenopause, < 5 years after final menstrual period; late postmenopause, ≥ 5 years after natural menopause. Values represent total words from 3 immediate recall trials and 1 delayed recall trial. Error bars are standard deviations.

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