Estrogen and Dementia: Challenging Conventional Wisdom – MERCOLA
For decades, mainstream medicine has promoted the idea that estrogen is protective for the brain, particularly in post-menopausal women. The conventional wisdom has been that the increased risk of dementia in older women is due to the “deficiency” of estrogen that occurs during menopause. However, a groundbreaking new study published in JAMA Neurology challenges this long-held belief, providing compelling evidence that blocking estrogen may lower the risk of dementia.
STORY AT-A-GLANCE
- A new study in JAMA Neurology challenges the long-held belief that estrogen protects against dementia in women. The research found that pure estrogen receptor antagonists and aromatase inhibitors were associated with a lower risk of dementia across women’s lifespans
- This study contradicts previous research suggesting estrogen’s protective effects on the brain, particularly in post-menopausal women
- The findings imply that other substances with anti-estrogenic effects, such as progesterone and certain vitamins, might also protect against dementia
- The medical establishment’s response to this study has been mixed, with some attempts to misrepresent or downplay its implications
- Natural anti-estrogenic approaches, including diet, exercise, and progesterone supplementation, may offer potential strategies for reducing dementia risk
https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2024/07/29/estrogen-and-dementia.aspx
I would love to get me some natural progesterone. When we lived in VT for 2 years, it was never a problem. But of course in Turd-o’s Canada, it is forbidden. I have asked…begged….2 different naturopaths, both of whom have prescribing privileges, to prescribe me some. Both have told me “I cannot do that”
Grrrrrr 🙁