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Hormones and Alzheimer’s: Is there a Connection?

At Get Well Scottsdale we always ask our clients to ponder this question.

“Do we age because we lose our hormones or do we lose our hormones because we age?”

This is an interesting question because as a population we are living longer than ever before, but the question really needs to be about our quality of life as we age.


Today, everyone seems to know someone that has been diagnosed with, or is suffering from, the effects of Alzheimer’s disease or dementia. It is a terrible and painful disease for all involved as it destroys brain function and is ultimately fatal.


There are several factors identified and commonly associated with brain abnormalities resulting in Alzheimer’s: (1)

  1. Beta amyloid plaques building up between neurons in the brain;

  2. Neurofibrillary tangles within the neurons (the tangles are composed of the hyper phosphorylated tau protein, which eventually kills the neurons);

  3. Impaired glucose metabolism in the brain (a degree of insulin resistance);

  4. Poor blood circulation to the brain.

A 2013 study in the Journal of Neurology states that women are eight times more likely to get Alzheimer’s than men, and men with low testosterone are three times more likely to suffer from the dementia. Testosterone is a vaso-dilator, opening blood vessels and increasing blood flow to the brain resulting in more oxygen and nutrition to the brain.


The connection between metabolism (mitochondria) and Alzheimer’s disease is also being established. In 2000, Suzanne de la Monte, MD, MPH, was recognized for her innovative research entitled Oxidative Injury and Anti-Oxidant Rescue of the Aging Brain in which she stated that for every Alzheimer’s patient the energy metabolism in the mitochondria was decreased; the amount of enzyme formation was decreased; and the number of mitochondria was decreased.


Thyroid hormones increase the metabolic activities of almost all the tissues of the body – including the number and activity of mitochondria. It also increases the total membrane surface area of the mitochondria in direct proportion to the increased metabolic rate of your body. As the Textbook of Medical Physiology states, “It seems almost to be an obvious deduction that principal function of thyroxin [thyroid hormone] might be simply to increase the number and activity of mitochondria.”


Millions of Americans are experiencing hypothyroid symptoms and are not being treated because their lab work appears to be in the normal ranges. Thyroid dysfunction has been implicated as a cause of reversible cognitive impairment.

In his book Solved: The Riddle of Alzheimer’s Disease, Mark Starr, MD, states the following on how hormones help prevent Alzheimer’s:

  1. Vitamin D3 (a hormone) increases the excretion of beta amyloid from the brain.

  2. Beta amyloid secretion is impaired by both testosterone and estradiol.

  3. Testosterone and estradiol increase alpha secretase activity. Beta secretase is an enzyme that prevents production of beta amyloid.

  4. Testosterone and estradiol increase neprilysin, an enzyme that degrades beta amyloid.

  5. Testosterone and progesterone inhibit the hyper phosphorylation of tau protein.

  6. Testosterone and estradiol improve brain cell glucose metabolism.

  7. Testosterone and estradiol improve blood flow to the brain.

The latest data that is coming out is showing that 17-Beta-Estradiol may play a role or may be responsible for the actual reversal of Alzheimer’s Disease. More study of course is required, but it is promising and exciting to see that a compound our body makes can actually play a role in protection and reversal of such a debilitating disease.

Self-care and prevention are the keys to optimal health. Paying close attention to how your body feels, and seeking assistance around optimizing your physiology is the key to a long, healthy, and happy life.


Reference: 1) Solved The Riddle of Alzheimer’s Disease by Mark Starr, MD.

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