Ask Me Anything

with The Peter Attia Drive - Private Subscriber Feed

Subscribe to ask a question

New Danish study on hormonal replacement therapy (younger women) - Pourhadi N et al, BMJ 2023

Peter and team, I would love to hear you integrate these findings into the body of evidence on hormonal replacement therapy and dementia risk for women Design Nationwide, nested case-control study. Setting Denmark through national registries. Participants: 5589 incident cases of dementia and 55 890 age matched controls were identified between 2000 and 2018 from a population of all Danish women aged 50-60 years in 2000 with no history of dementia or contraindications for use of menopausal hormone therapy. Main outcome measures: Adjusted hazard ratios with 95% confidence intervals for all cause dementia defined by a first time diagnosis or first time use of dementia specific medication. Results: Compared with people who had never used treatment, people who had received oestrogen-progestin therapy had an increased rate of all cause dementia (hazard ratio 1.24 (95% confidence interval 1.17 to 1.33)). Increasing durations of use yielded higher hazard ratios, ranging from 1.21 (1.09 to 1.35) for one year or less of use to 1.74 (1.45 to 2.10) for more than 12 years of use. Oestrogen-progestin therapy was positively associated with development of dementia for both continuous (1.31 (1.18 to 1.46)) and cyclic (1.24 (1.13 to 1.35)) regimens. Associations persisted in women who received treatment at the age 55 years or younger (1.24 (1.11 to 1.40)). Findings persisted when restricted to late onset dementia (1.21 (1.12 to 1.30)) and Alzheimer’s disease (1.22 (1.07 to 1.39)). Conclusions: Menopausal hormone therapy was positively associated with development of all cause dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, even in women who received treatment at the age of 55 years or younger. The increased rate of dementia was similar between continuous and cyclic treatment. Further studies are warranted to determine whether these findings represent an actual effect of menopausal hormone therapy on dementia risk, or whether they reflect an underlying predisposition in women in need of these treatments.

Root canals and dental implants

Have there been any studies on the long term side effects of root canals and dental implants . There is some social media content starting to emerge on this . How true is all of this ?

VO2 Master

What has been your experience and is a member discount in the works?

Zone 5 training and Marc2 results

The Marc2 study correlates “very vigorous activity” with increased arterial plaque. (I haven’t dug into the data). Thoughts?

How do Vibram 5 finger shoes compare to using Xero shoes?

I prefer a barefoot lifestyle, but that couldn't work for me when using a treadmill due to blisters. Is there any evidence that shoes like Xero are better or worse for foot health than Vibrams?