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Menopause and brain fog: how to counsel and treat midlife women

Pauline M. Maki, Nicole G. Jaff

2024Menopause The Journal of The North American Menopause Society12 citationsDOI

Abstract

Brain fog, referring to menopause-related subjective cognitive difficulties, is common in midlife women. Longitudinal studies find small but reliable declines in objective memory performance as women transition into perimenopause, and these are not explained by advancing age alone. When memory declines occur, performance levels remain within normal limits for all but a very small number of women. Women's experience of brain fog extends beyond memory complaints, reflecting the negative effect on a broad range of cognitive abilities. Clinicians can counsel women about how menopause symptoms, estrogen, hormone therapy, and modifiable risk factors (eg, hypertension, sedentary lifestyle) can influence cognitive health.

Topics & Concepts

MenopauseCognitionMedicineCognitive declineGerontologyEffects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performanceEstrogenCognitive impairmentPsychologyCognitive skillClinical psychologyDementiaPsychiatryDiseaseInternal medicineMenopause: Health Impacts and TreatmentsEstrogen and related hormone effectsMaternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum
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