Report examines Alzheimer’s disproportionate toll on women

March 19, 2014
aaUSA Today (3/19, Weintraub) reports that according to a report (pdf) released March 18 by the Alzheimer’s Association on its website, “Alzheimer’s takes a disproportionate toll on women.” The report found that “women are far more likely to develop the fatal disease than men: one in six women over 65 will get it during their lifetime, compared with one in 11 men.” What’s more, “women are more likely to be caregivers for someone with Alzheimer’s, and to pay a bigger personal and professional price for that care than men do.”

CNN (3/19, Goldschmidt) explains that “age is the greatest risk factor for gender differences among Alzheimer’s patients, but it’s not the only reason.” Scientists “are also looking at genetic and hormonal differences, according to Maria Carrillo, vice president of medical and scientific relations for the Alzheimer’s Association.” Currently, two-thirds of the “five million Americans” affected by Alzheimer’s are women.
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Vitamin D Not Linked to Calcium Levels

October 30, 2013
Increasing vitamin D levels had no effect on calcium absorption in young women, researchers reported.

In an ancillary result from a randomized clinical trial, women who started out with vitamin D insufficiency were brought up to normal levels through supplements over a 1-year period, according to Christopher Gallagher, MD, of Creighton University Medical Center in Omaha, and colleagues.

But the supplementation had no effect on calcium absorption at any dose, Gallagher and colleagues reported online in the Journal of Bone and Mineral Research.
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