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Menopause Matters magazine ISSUE 81 out now. (Autumn issue, September 2025)

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Author Topic: HRT and risk of alzheimers  (Read 2371 times)

CLKD

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  • changes can be scary, even when we want them
Re: HRT and risk of alzheimers
« Reply #15 on: February 10, 2020, 09:38:39 AM »

Health anxiety is common at The Change.  Women are juggling so many balls in the air!

I have never smoked: except when angry when steam comes out of my ears ;-)
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Kathleen

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Re: HRT and risk of alzheimers
« Reply #16 on: February 10, 2020, 12:59:35 PM »

Hello ladies

 I've read that clogged arteries have been seen in the brains of Alzheimer sufferers at autopsy. Perhaps keeping a good blood flow to the brain is preventative especially for vascular dementia.

Take care all.

K.
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dahliagirl

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Re: HRT and risk of alzheimers
« Reply #17 on: February 10, 2020, 01:00:21 PM »

Those I know who have gone for 'natural' do a lot of 'couch to 5k', mindfulness, yoga  and diet stuff.

This sort of thing did help me when I was younger and depressed and needed to sort out my life (although, looking back, I had some peri symptoms then  ??? but I don't think they were the cause - maybe they were a catalyst that made me realise something was wrong?).

Since then, I have made sure I do exercise, sing, and eat good, healthy food.
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Wrensong

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Re: HRT and risk of alzheimers
« Reply #18 on: February 10, 2020, 05:40:15 PM »

I agree with the other ladies' comments about adequate sleep & regular exercise.  Though HRT is still a work in progress for me, I'm able to both sleep & exercise better on it than without, so my feeling is HRT helps protect both my brain and body.  My mood is also better on HRT & that means I find it easier to commit to eating healthily, as we all know thought protective against all manner of degenerative processes. 

Mum's mum was, in old age, what they used to call back in the 1970s "a bit confused" but dad's mum was still baking & icing Christmas cakes for each of her 7 kids & their families into her late 80s & lived into her 90s without any hint of mental decline.  Unlikely either of them took HRT, but they died decades ago so I don't know for sure. 

I think all each of us can do is read up for ourselves as much as we find helpful, bearing in mind there's a lot of questionable & ever-changing info out there that can be hard to interpret & importantly, go with our gut instinct about what's right for us as individuals.  Chronic stress is known to be damaging to physical & mental health so anything we can do that helps with relaxation, especially if sleep is problematical, must also be a good thing.  With that in mind I try not to worry too much about needing HRT, though I think it's sensible also to try to keep up with reliable sources of published research for any particular areas of concern we have, turning to those when media reports suggest something new's come to light that needs consideration.  We can always review what's best for us in the light of changing expert opinion & our own changing circumstances & see how we are without HRT if that feels the right course of action.
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Beaker

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Re: HRT and risk of alzheimers
« Reply #19 on: February 10, 2020, 09:39:09 PM »

Good advice here. I am definitely finding increased exercise levels helps with anxiety and sleep. Am trying to winnow out the reliable evidence about HRT and ignore the rest.
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Penelope

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Re: HRT and risk of alzheimers
« Reply #20 on: February 12, 2020, 01:48:39 AM »

I would be happy to have Alzheimer's right now! Then  I would be able to forget how bad HRT made me feel yesterday 😂
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