Menopause causes metabolic and cognitive impairments in a chronic cerebral hypoperfusion model of vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia

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作者
Olivia J. Gannon
Janvie S. Naik
David Riccio
Febronia M. Mansour
Charly Abi-Ghanem
Abigail E. Salinero
Richard D. Kelly
Heddwen L. Brooks
Kristen L. Zuloaga
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[1] Albany Medical College,Department of Neuroscience and Experimental Therapeutics
[2] University of Arizona College of Medicine,Department of Physiology
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Neuroscience; Vascular; Dementia; Menopause; Cognitive impairment; Hypoperfusion; Estrogen; Metabolic; Myelin; Neuroinflammation;
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摘要
Nearly all women with dementia are menopausal. Reduced blood flow to the brain, resulting from damaged blood vessels, can lead to vascular dementia. Vascular dementia is the second most common cause of dementia. Before menopause, women are less likely than men to experience strokes, obesity, and diabetes—known risk factors for vascular dementia. During menopause, estrogen levels drop and the risk of developing these dementia risk factors increases. The goal of this study was to determine how menopause impacts risk factors (obesity, diabetes), memory and brain pathology in vascular dementia. This study used mouse models of vascular dementia and menopause. Menopause increased weight gain and other indicators of poor metabolic health. In mice with vascular dementia, menopausal mice had worse memory than pre-menopausal mice. After menopause, the brain still expressed estrogen receptors at normal (pre-menopausal) levels. This is encouraging for any future studies attempting to reverse the effects of estrogen loss by activating brain estrogen receptors.
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