4.7 • 3.4K Ratings
🗓️ 3 April 2024
⏱️ 109 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
This episode is brought to you by BiOptimizers, Lumebox, and AquaTru.
Women can spend up to 40% of their lives in menopause, and we know that they often experience changes in their mood, cognition, and overall brain health during this time. But these changes aren’t discussed openly or discussed with no helpful solutions, leaving women feeling hopeless, alone, or unsupported. Today’s guest is a brain researcher here to shed light on the changes during this time and what we can do to support women entering this phase.
Today, on the Dhru Purohit Show, Dhru sits down with Dr. Lisa Mosconi to discuss what happens to a woman’s brain when she goes through menopause and the connection to Alzheimer’s disease. Dr. Mosconi shares how to care for women’s brains during puberty, pregnancy, and menopause, how to prevent dementia and the lifestyle habits that can help women navigate the transition into menopause.
Lisa Mosconi, PhD, is an associate professor of neuroscience in neurology and radiology at Weill Cornell Medicine and the director of the Women’s Brain Initiative and the Alzheimer’s Prevention Clinic at Weill Cornell Medicine/NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital. She is also the New York Times bestselling author of The XX Brain and Brain Food.
In this episode, Dhru and Dr. Mosconi dive into (audio version / Apple Subscriber version):
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0:00.0 | Dr. Lisa Moskoni, welcome back to the podcast. |
0:03.2 | It's a pleasure to have you here. |
0:04.4 | Thank you, thank you for having me. |
0:06.1 | Let's start off with the basics. |
0:07.8 | You have a new book all about the menopause brain. |
0:12.3 | Talk to us about that time in a woman's life, |
0:16.0 | what is actually fundamentally going on in the brain, |
0:19.0 | and I believe you also have some incredible scans |
0:22.0 | that can help illustrate the message and really drive it home as well too. |
0:27.0 | Yes, so my research, as you know, I'm a brain scientist by training and I do brain imaging or brain scans for a living and they usually focus on Alzheimer's disease, the risk of Alzheimer's and how to prevent Alzheimer's disease, especially in women. |
0:46.4 | And there was my research on cognitive aging and dementia that led me eventually to study Manopause as a risk factor for Alzheimer's |
0:56.4 | disease and cognitive aging in women. So this is an interesting connection |
1:01.2 | there was not really fully explored until we came along in |
1:06.2 | some ways there was a lot of preclinical research but what was missing I think from |
1:11.1 | the picture was a very clear illustration of how menopause can impact |
1:19.0 | the brain as women go through it. |
1:23.0 | So there was research showing |
1:26.0 | what would happen, what can happen to women's brain health |
1:29.0 | after the fact, right? |
1:32.0 | So insofar as research had any interest, |
1:35.1 | the monopoles until 2017, |
1:37.4 | it was always in terms of the outcomes. |
... |
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