Thinking In Psychiatry
Access the mentioned paper here: Trying to Unravel Why Alzheimer Disease Is More Common in Women By Rita Rubin, MA https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2839498# [https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2839498#] Access mentioned courses here: Women’s Mental Health Course: https://psychscene.co/41RwJx2 [https://psychscene.co/41RwJx2] Alzheimer’s Disease Course: https://psychscene.co/4vNaeqH [https://psychscene.co/4vNaeqH] In this episode, Dr Sanil Rege examines why Alzheimer’s disease is more common in women and what this means for clinical assessment, prevention, and treatment. The discussion reviews a 2025 JAMA medical news feature (https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2839498# [https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2839498#]) on sex differences in Alzheimer’s disease and outlines a life-course model showing how sex-related vulnerability may shape disease onset, progression, and clinical expression. This video provides clinicians with a sex-informed clinical framework for assessing Alzheimer’s risk in women through the lens of hormonal transitions, cognitive reserve, and later-life neurodegenerative expression. Chapters: 00:21 Alzheimer’s Disease in Women 02:59 Beyond Longevity 03:40 Survival Differences After Dementia Diagnosis 04:34 Tau Pathology and Steeper Later Decline 06:00 Menopause and Hormonal Vulnerability 08:11 Modifiable Midlife Risk Factors in Women 13:18 A Sex-Informed Life-Course Formulation1 #Alzheimer's #Psychiatry #Dementia
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