
Estrogens and Memory by Karyn M Frick
Estrogens are key modulators of brain regions that mediate learning and memory formation. This regulation has significant translational implications, as estrogens contribute to age-related memory decline and dementia, emotional disorders, addiction, and recovery from brain injury. Although the importance of estrogens for memory formation has been well accepted within the behavioral neuroendocrinology community, it has yet to be fully appreciated by neuroscientists outside of the discipline. Recent National Institutes of Health policies on the inclusion of sex as a biological variable in grant applications will force thousands of researchers to consider hormonal regulation of memory for the first time. However, the majority of these researchers are not trained endocrinologists, and no previous monograph comprehensively encompasses the breadth of basic and clinical research on this subject. Thus, this book provides a vital resource for non-endocrinologists and endocrinologists alike. Estrogens and Memory: Basic Research and Clinical Implications provides a compendium of cutting-edge basic and clinical research describing the ways in which estrogens regulate memory in a variety of species. Chapters are written by leading experts whose work is on the forefront of this exciting field. Three fundamental discussions focus on: effects of estrogens on the hippocampus and other brain regions central to memory, effects of estrogens on memory and related cognitive processes throughout the lifespan, and translational implications of estrogenic regulation of memory for aging and disease.
Estrogens and Memory: Basic Research and Clinical Implications provides a very important, current overview of a field that has opened up the brain as an important target of sex hormones that affect cognitive, emotional, and motor functions throughout the brain and not just reproductionThe book includes chapters by leading researchers on this topic and covers basic molecular and behavioral mechanistic studies as well as clinical findings." * Bruce S. McEwen, PhD, Alfred E. Mirsky Professor, Head of the Harold and Margaret Milliken Hatch Laboratory of Neuroendocrinology, The Rockefeller University *
How do estrogens regulate memory? It depends. Estrogens and Memory: Basic Research and Clinical Implications introduces readers to important questions concerning the interaction of long-term and rapid mechanisms that regulate estrogenic effects on memory, neuroprotection, and maintenance of brain function in the face of stressors, brain damage, disease, and reduced responsiveness during aging. In addition to supporting the idea that estrogens are rapid neuromodulators of memory, the pros and cons for hormone therapy in women are highly debated, and differing opinions and putative reasons for conflicting results are clearly presented and discussed in depth. This book would form a solid foundation for a course on the effects of estrogens on the neurons underlying memory formation." * Thomas C. Foster, PhD, Professor in the Department of Neuroscience and Genetics and Genomics Program, and Evelyn F. McKnight Chair for Research on Cognitive Aging and Memory, University of Florida *
Understanding the role of estrogens in mediating memory is key to elucidating critical questions of human health such as: How are estrogens involved in the memory aspects of neuropsychiatric disorders? Are those memory circuits established before birth? What are the underlying causes of Alzheimer's disease in women? Can estrogens be used therapeutically to maintain memory function as we age? This outstanding compendium of research from scientists at the cutting edge of estrogen research provides the tools to think about all of these important questions and more. Organized to present a translational and trans-species perspective, it moves from the molecular to the behavioral as it presents a lucid and deep exposition of current knowledge that will inspire and underscore estrogens' key role in memory, one of the essential attributes that make us human." * Gillian Einstein, PhD, Professor of Psychology, University of Toronto, Wilfred and Joyce Posluns Chair in Women's Brain Health and Aging *
How do estrogens regulate memory? It depends. Estrogens and Memory: Basic Research and Clinical Implications introduces readers to important questions concerning the interaction of long-term and rapid mechanisms that regulate estrogenic effects on memory, neuroprotection, and maintenance of brain function in the face of stressors, brain damage, disease, and reduced responsiveness during aging. In addition to supporting the idea that estrogens are rapid neuromodulators of memory, the pros and cons for hormone therapy in women are highly debated, and differing opinions and putative reasons for conflicting results are clearly presented and discussed in depth. This book would form a solid foundation for a course on the effects of estrogens on the neurons underlying memory formation." * Thomas C. Foster, PhD, Professor in the Department of Neuroscience and Genetics and Genomics Program, and Evelyn F. McKnight Chair for Research on Cognitive Aging and Memory, University of Florida *
Understanding the role of estrogens in mediating memory is key to elucidating critical questions of human health such as: How are estrogens involved in the memory aspects of neuropsychiatric disorders? Are those memory circuits established before birth? What are the underlying causes of Alzheimer's disease in women? Can estrogens be used therapeutically to maintain memory function as we age? This outstanding compendium of research from scientists at the cutting edge of estrogen research provides the tools to think about all of these important questions and more. Organized to present a translational and trans-species perspective, it moves from the molecular to the behavioral as it presents a lucid and deep exposition of current knowledge that will inspire and underscore estrogens' key role in memory, one of the essential attributes that make us human." * Gillian Einstein, PhD, Professor of Psychology, University of Toronto, Wilfred and Joyce Posluns Chair in Women's Brain Health and Aging *
Dr. Frick is a behavioral neuroscientist and neuroendocrinologist. She is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and an Adjunct Professor of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics at the Medical College of Wisconsin.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9780190645908 |
| ISBN 10 | 0190645903 |
| Title | Estrogens and Memory |
| Author | Karyn M Frick |
| Series | Oxford Series In Behavioral Neuroendocrinology |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Hardback |
| Publisher | Oxford University Press Inc |
| Year published | 2020-02-20 |
| Number of pages | 516 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |