Hormone therapy may improve
the trip down Memory Lane
Newswise — Many women experience declines in their memory during and
after menopause, a change thought to be due, in part, to the rapid
hormonal changes they weather during that time.
Now, research from the University of Michigan Health System suggests
that hormone therapy might help women retain certain memory
functions. In a study in the new issue of The Journal of Clinical
Endocrinology & Metabolism, they report that a group of
postmenopausal women showed more brain activity during a visual
memory test than did women who were not taking the hormone therapy.
The 10 postmenopausal women in the study, ages 50-60, were
given hormone therapy or a placebo for four weeks, followed
by a month with no medications, and then four weeks of the
other treatment. Their brain activation was measured as they
were shown a complex grid of 81 squares, with 40 of them
darkened to form a pattern.
Participants were asked to find the matching image from a choice of
two, with the new set of images presented after varying time periods
(one to four seconds).
During the time that the two images were
shown, participants were asked to choose the one that matched the
initial grid by pressing one of two buttons on an MRI (magnetic
resonance imaging)-compatible response pad.
Those who were taking combined estrogen-progestin hormone therapy
showed significantly increased activity in the prefrontal cortex, a
region of the brain that is critical in memory tasks, compared with
those on placebo (a pill with no medicinal value). The researchers
used images from functional MRI, or fMRI, to compare the
participants’ brain activity.
“Our findings suggest that even relatively short periods of hormone
therapy have effects on the memory systems that may be of benefit to
some women during the perimenopausal transition or early
postmenopause,” says lead author Yolanda R. Smith, M.D., associate
professor in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the U-M
Medical School.
“Other studies have indicated that long-term hormone therapy is not
beneficial for the prevention of chronic illnesses,” Smith says.
“But our study indicates that the effects of short-term hormone
therapy on brain circuitry and function warrant further study.”
The role of estrogen in maintaining brain function is of great
significance as the population ages and the incidence of dementia
increases, says senior author Jon-Kar Zubieta, M.D., Ph.D.,
associate professor of psychiatry and radiology at the U-M Medical
School and associate research scientist at U-M’s Molecular &
Behavioral Neuroscience Institute (MBNI).
Zubieta notes that working memory – that is, a limited-capacity
storage system that allows the brain to actively maintain and
manipulate information that is critical for conducting many daily
activities over short time periods – has been demonstrated to be
less efficient in older adults. This decline has been linked with
changes in the prefrontal cortex.
“Our finding of increased activation in the prefrontal cortex in
older women using hormone therapy is important and suggestive of
potential therapies that need to be explored further,” he says.
“Eventually, this could lead to new options for women as they enter
a time when memory problems typically develop.”
The researchers also point out that there have been shown to be
risks with hormone replacement therapy. Information is available at
www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/women/pht_facts.pdf.
In addition to Smith and Zubieta, other authors were Tiffany Love,
B.S., of the U-M Department of Psychiatry and MBNI; Carol C. Persad,
Ph.D., of the Department of Psychiatry; Anne Tkaczyk, M.S., of the
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology; and Thomas E. Nichols,
Ph.D., of the Department of Biostatistics at the U-M School of
Public Health.
The research was supported in part by a grant from the National
Center for Research Resources and an investigator-initiated grant
from Pfizer Pharmaceuticals Group. Smith received an
investigator-initiated grant from Pfizer Pharmaceuticals, Nichols
has consulted for GlaxoSmithKline Inc., and Zubieta has received
lecture fees from GlaxoSmith Kline Inc., Eli Lilly and Co., and
Forest Laboratories.