4.6 Article

Subcortical Volume Changes in Early Menopausal Women and Correlation With Neuropsychological Tests

Journal

FRONTIERS IN AGING NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.738679

Keywords

early menopausal women; FreeSurfer; subcortical and cortical volume; amygdala; cognition; emotion

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In this study, early menopausal women exhibited significant subcortical volumetric loss in the left and right amygdala compared to premenopausal controls, along with higher serum FSH levels, more evident climacteric and depressive symptoms, decreased sleep quality, and lower working memory and executive functions. FSH levels were correlated with lower working memory accuracy and longer reaction time. Decreased subcortical volume in the bilateral amygdala was also associated with lower working memory accuracy and longer executive reaction time in early menopausal women, suggesting estradiol deficiency in early menopausal women may lead to subcortical volume and functional brain changes.
Background: The aging process and declining estradiol levels are two important factors that cause structural brain alterations. Many prior studies have investigated these two elements and revealed controversial results in menopausal women. Here, a cross-sectional study was designed to individually evaluate estradiol-related structural changes in the brain.Methods: A total of 45 early menopausal women and 54 age-matched premenopausal controls were enrolled and subjected to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, blood biochemistry tests, and neuropsychological tests. MRI structural images were analyzed using FreeSurfer to detect changes in subcortical and cortical volumes as well as cortical thickness. Finally, structural brain data as well as clinical and neuropsychological data were used for Pearson's correlation analyses to individually determine estradiol-related structural and functional changes in the brains of early menopausal women.Results: Compared with the premenopausal controls, the early menopausal women showed significant subcortical volumetric loss in the left amygdala and right amygdala, higher serum follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels, more recognizable climacteric and depressive symptoms, decreased quality of sleep, and decreased working memory and executive functions. Simultaneously, FSH levels were related to lower working memory accuracy and longer working memory reaction time. Decreased subcortical volume in the bilateral amygdala was also related to lower working memory accuracy and longer executive reaction time in early menopausal women.Conclusion: The data suggest that estradiol deficiency in early menopausal women can lead to subcortical volume and functional brain changes, which may contribute to further understanding the neurobiological role of declined estradiol levels in early menopausal women.

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