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To print: Select File and then Print from your browser's menu Title: Hormone Replacement Timing May Improve Chances of Avoiding Dementia: Presented at ICAD |
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"Hormone Replacement Timing May Improve Chances of Avoiding Dementia: Presented at ICAD" By Ed Susman CHICAGO -- July 28, 2008 -- Women who take hormone replacement therapy (HRT) during midlife or close to the time of menopause appear to have a lower risk of developing dementia compared with women who take this therapy later in life, researchers reported here at the 2008 International Conference on Alzheimer's Disease (ICAD). "However, women who started hormones at 70 years or older had a higher risk of Alzheimer's disease," said Rachel A. Whitmer, PhD, Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente, Oakland, California. Dr. Whitmer discussed the findings on 5,553 women in the Kaiser Permanente of North Carolina database in an oral presentation on July 27. After adjusting for other risk factors, women who used HRT at midlife decreased their risk of dementia by about 24% compared with women who did not take any HRT, while women who took hormones only late in life had a 46% increase in risk ([P = .03). "The findings appear to confirm the 'window of opportunity' theory," Dr. Whitmer said. "The theory assumes there is a time when HRT works to the benefit of the patients and other times when this treatment may be detrimental." |
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