So is your doctors expectations wrong for womens' memory skills post-stroke?
https://www.bostonglobe.com/lifestyle/health-wellness/2016/11/20/menopause-really-does-affect-memory-researchers-find/n2oOYjcEMfWy3g1xHlNaOL/story.html
The greatest known risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease is,
unsurprisingly, age. The second is gender. At age 65, healthy women have
a one in six
chance of developing the memory loss disease during their lifetime,
compared with a one in 11 chance for men — a statistic that cannot be
solely explained by the fact that women generally live longer than men.
Other biological factors appear to be at play.
In a study
published this month in the journal Menopause, researchers at Brigham
and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School explore what may be a
related phenomenon: how menopause affects memory. According to the
study, between the ages of 45 and 55, women outperform men in memory
function, but some types of memory appear to fade as estrogen declines.
Postmenopausal women were worse at learning new information and
retrieving new memories than premenopausal women.
The findings suggest that hormonal changes play an important role in
maintaining memory in women, and could help identify which women are at
highest risk for developing Alzheimer’s or other forms of memory loss,
the authors say.
“Understanding healthy aging will provide clues
to how the brain goes awry in men and women, and who might be at highest
risk for the disease earlier in life,” says senior author Jill
Goldstein, director of research at the Connors Center for Women’s Health
and Gender Biology.
Many studies have found that women perform better on verbal memory
tasks than men — from post-puberty through old age — but little is known
about how that memory is affected by hormonal changes. Goldstein and
colleagues invited 212 healthy men and women, ages 45 to 55, from the
New England Family Study to participate in a battery of verbal memory
and learning tests, such as associating names with faces, learning new
information, and recall of that information.
As expected, women outperformed men of the same age on all the
cognitive measures. But women who had not yet experienced menopause
performed better than postmenopausal women in two key areas of memory:
the ability to learn new associative memories — relationships between
unrelated items, like a face and a name — and to retrieve them. That
performance decline was associated with lower levels of estradiol, the
main form of estrogen in the brain, in the blood of the participants.
The
finding supports the idea that “brain fog,” a type of forgetfulness
that springs up during midlife, may be associated with hormonal changes
rather than job stress or other midlife factors. The researchers are now
studying the postmenopausal women who performed best on the memory
tests to see if they can discover biological factors, such as genetics
or the immune system, that may help maintain a strong memory.
The impact of gender will be a key part of understanding risk for
dementia and finding treatments for it, Goldstein emphasizes. “We’re in
this day and age of precision medicine. What could be more central than
one’s sex in developing more efficacious treatments?”
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