City
Epaper

Midlife stress may raise Alzheimer's risk in postmenopausal women: Study

By IANS | Updated: May 17, 2025 16:02 IST

New Delhi, May 17 High midlife stress may increase the chances of Alzheimer's disease in women after their ...

Open in App

New Delhi, May 17 High midlife stress may increase the chances of Alzheimer's disease in women after their menopause, according to a study.

Scientists at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, in the US, discovered that high levels of the stress hormone cortisol in midlife can increase amyloid deposition -- a hallmark of Alzheimer's -- in postmenopausal women later.

"The results highlight the importance of identifying early risk factors when biomarkers are detectable but cognitive impairment is absent," said Arash Salardini, Associate Professor at the varsity.

In the study, published in the journal Alzheimer's & Dementia, the team analysed data from 305 cognitively unimpaired participants in Massachusetts, US.

No significant associations were observed in males or with tau burden, referring to the tau protein that contributes to neuronal dysfunction and death.

"Our work shows that considering sex and hormonal status in understanding Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis is important and suggests that stress reduction and hormonal interventions may hold promise for Alzheimer's prevention, especially in at-risk women," said Sudha Seshadri, from UT Health San Antonio.

Cortisol is a steroid hormone essential for cellular homeostasis, or balance, and the stress response.

In the study, the team hypothesised that cortisol's impact on Alzheimer's pathology would be more pronounced in women, especially after menopause, consistent with some previous findings.

Their results showed that postmenopausal women with high midlife cortisol are at increased risk of Alzheimer's disease. Postmenopausal hormone changes may also amplify cortisol's effects on amyloid, said the researchers.

Salardini called for further studies to determine whether these early amyloid changes translate into clinical symptoms and to clarify the causal role of cortisol in Alzheimer’s disease development.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other Sports"We proved it in Pune and can do it again," says Vishal Uppal ahead of Billie Jean King Cup Play-Offs in Bengaluru

InternationalPM Modi expresses gratitude to Bhutan for reverent welcome to sacred relics of Lord Buddha from India

NationalFairPoint: Rahul Gandhi's Gen Z gamble, but is it listening?

CricketAbu Dhabi T10 League: Shakib Al Hasan to lead Royal Champs

EntertainmentPM Modi highlights Uttarakhand's rise as an emerging destination for weddings and film shoots

Health Realted Stories

HealthAI to make more ‘significant discoveries’ by 2028 and beyond, says OpenAI

HealthSmog chokes Delhi-NCR as AQI breaches 400 mark in several places

HealthCentre sets Jan 1 deadline for states to ensure pharma firms meet global norms

HealthTN launches upgraded TAEI Registry 2.0 to enhance emergency care network

HealthDoctors assaulted by patient's relatives at Mumbai's Cooper Hospital, case registered