Book contents
- Hormones, Cognition and Dementia
- Hormones, Cognition and Dementia
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Section 1 Estrogens and cognition: perspectives and opportunities in the wake of the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study
- Section 2 Varieties of estrogenic therapy
- Chapter 7 Alternative estrogenic treatment regimens and the Kronos Early Estrogen Prevention Study – Cognitive and Affective substudy (KEEPS-CA)
- Chapter 8 The use of transdermal 17β-estradiol in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease
- Chapter 9 Alternative modes of treatment: pulsatile estradiol treatment
- Chapter 10 In search of estrogen alternatives for the brain
- Section 3 Potential modulators and modifiers of estrogenic effects
- Section 4 Possible genetic factors related to hormone treatment effects
- Section 5 Testosterone, estradiol and men, and sex hormone binding globulin
- Section 6 Gonadotropin effects
- Index
- Plate Section
Chapter 10 - In search of estrogen alternatives for the brain
from Section 2 - Varieties of estrogenic therapy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
- Hormones, Cognition and Dementia
- Hormones, Cognition and Dementia
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Section 1 Estrogens and cognition: perspectives and opportunities in the wake of the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study
- Section 2 Varieties of estrogenic therapy
- Chapter 7 Alternative estrogenic treatment regimens and the Kronos Early Estrogen Prevention Study – Cognitive and Affective substudy (KEEPS-CA)
- Chapter 8 The use of transdermal 17β-estradiol in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease
- Chapter 9 Alternative modes of treatment: pulsatile estradiol treatment
- Chapter 10 In search of estrogen alternatives for the brain
- Section 3 Potential modulators and modifiers of estrogenic effects
- Section 4 Possible genetic factors related to hormone treatment effects
- Section 5 Testosterone, estradiol and men, and sex hormone binding globulin
- Section 6 Gonadotropin effects
- Index
- Plate Section
Summary
This chapter briefly reviews recent advancements in the search for a non-feminizing estrogen alternative that can mimic estrogen's positive effects on cognitive health without eliciting an undesirable impact on reproductive and cardiovascular systems. The discussion focuses on two avenues of translational development, tissue-selective and subtype-selective estrogen receptor (ER) modulators (SERMs), in particular ERβ-selective phytoSERMs as a natural approach for potentially promoting neurological health and preventing age-associated cognitive impairment and risk of Alzheimer's disease in both genders.
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- Hormones, Cognition and DementiaState of the Art and Emergent Therapeutic Strategies, pp. 93 - 100Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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