Interestingness: 1
Paper by Mahendra K Thakur in the Journal of Anti-Aging Medicine, Volume 2, Issue 2, Summer 1999.
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The most interesting part of the paper is a mention of a result in some other paper that women receiving estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) are 40% less likely to have Alzheimer's disease (AD) than women not receiving ERT.
The rest is a description of the changes in neurotransmitter and receptor densities in the brain as it ages, how estrogen might affect those neurons that produce and receive those neurotransmitters, mainly going by rat studies, results of women's mental scores going down when taking medication that suppresses estrogen production, and how those scores are rescued when taking ERT. I'm not good at absorbing the neurotransmitter information, so I glazed over a lot of it. Nerve growth factor seemed to be mentioned a lot.
There was also mention of estrogen as an antioxidant and its relation to AD. My biases prevailed and I discounted all of it before it even hit my long term memory.
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Abstract follows:
Recent research findings have made it clear that the female sex-steroid hormone estrogen has several functions other than regulation of sexual and reproductive behavior. In addition to this hormone's well-known influence on bone and the heart, this hormone exerts a wide variety of effects on the brain, including both development and function. The current interest in aging of the brain derives, in part, from the enormous and global increase in the proportion of elderly people. Old age is associated with several health problems including a general decline in mental function, especially in dementia, and specifically Alzheimer's dementia (AD). To focus on this issue, it is essential to understand the changes taking place in the aging brain and the role that estrogen plays in this process. This article reviews the data on the involvement of estrogen in the aging brain and discusses the potential consequences of estrogen replacement therapy.
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