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Long-Term Hormone Therapy
No Help for Alzheimer's
Excerpt
By Kathleen Doheny, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- Long-term hormone
therapy, taken in the traditional continuous manner, doesn't improve
symptoms of Alzheimer's disease in women and may make memory loss
worse, a new rat study suggests.
The findings reflect those of a human
study, published in 2000 in the Journal of the American Medical
Association, in which researchers found that women with mild
to moderate Alzheimer's who were put on hormone replacement therapy
initially had better mental functioning than women with the disease
who weren't on the therapy. However, then the hormone-supplemented
group's mental skills dropped below that of the women not on the
therapy.
Hormone therapy "is seen as a
neuroprotective agent," says Gary L. Wenk, a researcher at
the University of Arizona.
His team found otherwise, at least
when the therapy was given continuously.
For the study, published in the October
issue of Behavioral Neuroscience, the researchers induced
ovarian failure in female rats and produced low levels of chronic
inflammation in their brains, similar to Alzheimer's disease conditions
in older women. Then they tested the rats' ability to perform
a water maze task.
Removal of the ovaries alone was not
enough to decrease performance, the scientists found. But if they
introduced either sustained estrogen replacement therapy or chronic
brain inflammation, the animals performed more poorly on the memory
task.
"We thought the estrogen [administered
continuously to the rats without ovaries, similar to continuous
hormone replacement therapy in human females] would be beneficial,"
Wenk says.
The problem, he adds, may be the continuous
nature of the hormone therapy. The fact that younger rats with
ovaries didn't suffer mental decline may have something to do
with the ovaries being intact and the way they function normally,
he says.
"Ovaries release more than estrogen,"
Wenk says. "It may be the cycling estrogen or something to
do with the interaction with progesterone."
If there's a way to mimic more closely
the hormone levels of animals with functioning ovaries that might
be promising, he says.
"Long-term chronic daily therapy
may be what we just need to throw out," he says.
The study "pretty much is
backing up the human study," says Jon Nilsen, a research
assistant professor of pharmacology and toxicology at the University
of Southern California School of Pharmacy.
Echoing Wenk's suggestion, Nilsen
says the new findings also lend support to the idea that fluctuating
hormone levels in animals or humans with ovaries or the balance
of estrogen and progesterone in younger women may be the key to
finding a therapy regimen that works for older women.
Next, Wenk says, he wants to conduct
research introducing variable hormone replacement therapy into
animals that would mimic the levels of an animal with functioning
ovaries to see if that approach might improve memory and help
Alzheimer's symptoms.
Meanwhile, the take-home point
for women hoping to minimize or avoid Alzheimer's disease, he
says, is that hormone replacement therapy as typically given "is
not beneficial for prevention, the evidence isn't there, and certainly
not for treatment."
What To Do
For more information on Alzheimer's
disease and its
treatment, visit the Alzheimer's Association.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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