This site is a resource for tips and tools for excellence in care for women. It is dedicated to happenings at the Women's Health Education Program of Drexel University College of Medicine. WHEP's programming includes innovative education of health professionals, community outreach, community participatory research and networking with like-minded people interested in overcoming gender health disparities.
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Friday, July 10, 2015
Are Women at Higher Risk for Dementia?
FACT: Almost two-thirds of people in the US with Alzheimer's disease are women.
FACT: At age 65, women have a 1:6 chance of developing the disease compared to men, where the chance is 1:11.
Is it because women tend to live longer than men? Genetics? Hormones? Cardiovascular health?
While it's true that women outlive men by an average of 5 years, we know that Alzheimer's actually begins long before the diagnosis is made - perhaps as long as 20 years. And the pace of the disease appears to be faster in women.
It turns out that women who carry an ApoE-4 variant are twice as likely to develop Alzheimer's compared to women without the gene. Whether other factors/co-factors are at play and whether the approach to diagnosis, treatment and prevention should be different in women vs. men remains to be seen.
Judith Wolf, MD
Associate Director, WHEP
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