University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT.
Menopause. 2018 Dec;25(12):1424-1431. doi: 10.1097/GME.0000000000001157.
Cognitive outcomes in trials of postmenopausal hormone treatment have been inconsistent. Differing outcomes may be attributed to hormone formulation, treatment duration and timing, and differential cognitive domain effects. We previously demonstrated treatment benefits on visual cognitive function. In the present study, we describe the effects of hormone treatment on verbal outcomes in the same women, seeking to understand the effects of prior versus current hormone treatment on verbal function.
This is a cross-sectional evaluation of 57 women (38 hormone users [25 prior long-term users and 13 current users] and 19 never-users). Hormone users took identical formulations of estrogen or estrogen + progestin (0.625 mg/d conjugated equine estrogens with or without medroxyprogesterone acetate) for at least 10 years, beginning within 2 years of menopause. Women were evaluated with tests of verbal function and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of a verbal discrimination task.
All women scored similarly on assessments of verbal function (Hopkins Verbal Learning Test and a verbal discrimination task performed during the fMRI scanning session); however, women ever treated with hormones had more left inferior frontal (T = 3.72; P < 0.001) and right prefrontal cortex (T = 3.53; P < 0.001) activation during the verbal task. Hormone-treated women performed slightly worse on the verbal discrimination task (mean accuracy 81.72 ± 11.57 ever-treated, 85.30 ± 5.87 never-treated, P = 0.14), took longer to respond (mean reaction time 1.10 ± 0.17 s ever-treated, 1.02 ± 0.11 never-treated, P = 0.03), and remembered fewer previously viewed words (mean accuracy 62.21 ± 8.73 ever-treated, 65.45 ± 7.49 never-treated, P = 0.18). Increased posterior cingulate activity was associated with longer response times (R = 0.323, P = 0.015) and worse delayed verbal recall (R = -0.328, P = 0.048), suggesting that increased activation was associated with less efficient cognitive processing. We did not detect between group differences in activation in the left prefrontal cortex, superior frontal cortex, thalamus, or occipital/parietal junction.
Although current and past hormone treatment was associated with differences in neural pathways used during verbal discrimination, verbal function was not higher than never-users.
绝经后激素治疗试验中的认知结果一直不一致。不同的结果可能归因于激素制剂、治疗持续时间和时间,以及认知域效应的差异。我们之前证明了治疗对视觉认知功能的益处。在本研究中,我们描述了相同女性中激素治疗对语言结果的影响,旨在了解既往和当前激素治疗对语言功能的影响。
这是对 57 名女性(38 名激素使用者[25 名既往长期使用者和 13 名当前使用者]和 19 名从未使用者)的横断面评估。激素使用者至少服用了 10 年的相同雌激素或雌激素+孕激素(0.625mg/d 结合马雌激素,加或不加醋酸甲羟孕酮),开始于绝经后 2 年内。女性接受了语言功能测试和语言辨别任务的功能磁共振成像(fMRI)评估。
所有女性在语言功能评估中得分相似(霍普金斯语言学习测试和在 fMRI 扫描过程中进行的语言辨别任务);然而,曾经接受激素治疗的女性在语言任务中表现出更多的左侧下额(T=3.72;P<0.001)和右侧前额(T=3.53;P<0.001)激活。接受激素治疗的女性在语言辨别任务中的表现略差(平均准确率 81.72±11.57 例曾接受治疗,85.30±5.87 例从未接受治疗,P=0.14),反应时间更长(平均反应时间 1.10±0.17s 例曾接受治疗,1.02±0.11 例从未接受治疗,P=0.03),且记忆的先前看过的单词更少(平均准确率 62.21±8.73 例曾接受治疗,65.45±7.49 例从未接受治疗,P=0.18)。后扣带回活动增加与反应时间延长(R=0.323,P=0.015)和延迟语言回忆较差(R=0.328,P=0.048)相关,表明激活增加与认知处理效率降低有关。我们没有发现左前额叶、额上回、丘脑或枕叶/顶叶交界处的组间激活差异。
尽管当前和过去的激素治疗与语言辨别过程中使用的神经通路不同有关,但语言功能并未高于从未使用者。