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Ovary removal surgery
elevates risk for dementia
Newswise — Mayo Clinic researchers
have found that ovariectomy, surgical removal of a woman’s ovaries,
raises her risk of developing dementia or cognitive impairment. Risk
is especially increased if a woman has her ovaries removed at a
young age.
The findings will be presented
Wednesday at the American Academy of Neurology meeting in San Diego.
The researchers studied 1,209
women who had surgical removal of both ovaries and 1,302 women who
had only one removed from 1950 to 1987 in Olmsted County, Minn.,
home of Mayo Clinic. They compared each of the women who had
undergone ovary removal with women who had no ovaries removed and
followed them over time to see whether they developed dementia or
cognitive impairment. Dementia or cognitive impairment was
determined by interviewing a family member who reported a diagnosis
of dementia, or by a low score on a telephone cognitive test given
to the affected individual.
Walter Rocca, M.D., M.P.H., Mayo
Clinic neurologist and epidemiologist, and lead study author,
proposes two possible theories to explain the increased risk: 1) low
estrogen due to the ovary removal leads to decreased protection of a
woman’s brain from cognitive decline, or 2) the ovariectomy is
innocent and variations in the genes a woman is born with dictate
the need for ovary removal and also prompt development of dementia
or cognitive impairment.
The researchers hypothesize that
the risk of dementia or cognitive impairment is higher when the
surgery takes place at a younger age -- removal of both ovaries
before age 46 or one ovary before age 38 -- due to insufficient
estrogen. Prior epidemiologic and laboratory studies have pointed to
a role for estrogen in protecting the brain from aging.
Even though women with both
ovaries removed are given hormone replacement therapy, Dr. Rocca
says it’s not for long enough for women who have the surgery at a
young age.
“Estrogen supplementation normally
is not that long -- women receive it for five or six years, till the
menopausal symptoms diminish,” says Dr. Rocca. “The current
treatment is often not sufficient to get women who have ovariectomy
through the age of natural menopause, especially if the surgery is
performed at a young age. Thus, these women don’t get quite enough
estrogen.”
Dr. Rocca emphasizes that his
study’s findings must be discussed by those contemplating ovary
removal with their physicians in the context of the woman’s overall
situation -- such as medical history, genetic makeup and other
factors.
“Like any medical or surgical
decision, there is a trade between risk and benefit,” says Dr. Rocca.
“Our findings are important for situations where the removal of the
ovaries is elective -- that is, conducted to reduce the risk of
ovarian cancer.”
In addition to Dr. Rocca, members
of the Mayo Clinic research team included: Brandon Grossardt; Mariza
de Andrade, Ph.D.