4 Hormonal Dementia Risk Factors That All Women Should Know About
Ladies, time to check on our reproductive health.
Image by Luke Liable / Stocksy October 01, 2025 Women are two times more likely1 to develop Alzheimer's disease (the most common form of dementia) as men, according to a 2018 SAGE Journals review. Historically, it was believed that this correlation between dementia prevalence and sex was due to women's longer life span—the theory was that a longer life left room for a brain-aging disease to manifest. Today, leading neurologists (many, if not most, are female) are discovering that other biological mechanisms likely play a larger role than age—including hormones and reproductive factors, like pregnancy and menopause.
Female hormonal risk factors for dementia
In 2022, a UK cohort study published by PLOS Medicine took a look at which reproductive and hormonal health factors2 put women at a higher risk of developing dementia, and their results were quite illuminating.
These four risk factors, in particular, were found to increase women's dementia risk:
Why (& how) does reproductive health impact dementia risk?
As explained by neuroscientist, nutritionist, and associate director of the Alzheimer's Prevention Clinic at Weill Cornell Medical College Lisa Mosconi, Ph.D., in a mindbodygreen podcast episode, reproductive hormones play a massive role in protecting our brains from damage (such as the amyloid plaques associated with Alzheimer's disease).
"The interactions between the brain and the reproductive organs are really crucial for brain health and brain aging—especially in women," she says. "We tend to think of testosterone [and] estrogens as involved in reproduction, having kids. But in reality, these hormones have a lot of effects inside our brains."
"In particular, they literally push our neurons to bring glucose to make energy. So if your hormones are high, your brain energy is high. But then what happens to testosterone is that it doesn't quite decline that much over time, whereas for women, estrogens pretty much plummet when women go through menopause," Mosconi shares.
It's this plummet in estrogen that leaves women's brains especially vulnerable when they hit menopause in their 40s or 50s. "If you think of these hormones as having some kind of superpowers for the brain, women lose the superpower around the time that menopause hits, right? And the brain is left a little more vulnerable," Mosconi says.
Like menopause, having your uterus or ovaries removed (i.e., a hysterectomy or oophorectomy) also results in a drastic drop in estrogen levels. Other periods of hormonal fluctuations—such as puberty and pregnancy—influence estrogen levels as well, which explains why some hormonal health factors leave women at higher risk while others help protect their brains.
How can women best support their brain longevity?
In addition to working with a health care provider and implementing brain-healthy lifestyle habits, women can also consider a targeted nootropic supplement with ingredients that target cognitive health.
The takeaway
Hormonal health factors may play a larger role in women's dementia risk than scientists previously thought. Thankfully, there are quite a few things that women can do to help support their cognitive function and brain longevity.
Aliver 
