Until not long ago, medicine used to look at menopause with an almost exclusively reproductive lens. The focus was on the end of the menstrual cycle, hot flashes and hormonal instability. However, in the living room of many women between 40 and 55 years old, the conversation is different: it is recurring forgetfulness, difficulty concentrating or that feeling of “brain fog” that seems to arrive without invitation.
Now, a new study carried out by researchers at the University of Vermont, in the United States, gives a scientific name to what many intuit. Menopause is not just a transition of the reproductive system; It is, fundamentally, a neurological transition.
A new brain architecture
The work, recently published in the specialized magazine Menopause, analyzed functional magnetic resonance images of 151 women. The objective was not to look for pathologies, but to observe the “route map” of the brain: how the different regions communicate with each other when we are at rest.
What Abigail Testo and Julie Dumas, the researchers leading the project, found suggests that the brain does not sit idly by while hormone levels fall. On the contrary, it is reconfigured.
“When a woman goes through the climacteric, the brain experiences changes in its functional connectivity that are measurable,” the report explains. By comparing women in pre-, peri-, and postmenopausal stages, the team found that those who had already left the menstrual cycle behind had lower connectivity in key areas.
The supramarginal gyrus and memory
One of the findings that caught the most attention was the lower synchronization between the supramarginal gyrus—an area that functions as the engine of our verbal working memory—and the right temporal plane. In simple terms, it's as if one of the highways we use to retain immediate information and process language is running with less traffic than usual.
Does this translate into memory leak? Not necessarily in a dramatic way, but it does help explain why those small daily forgetfulness become more frequent at this stage of life.
Additionally, the postmenopausal group showed changes in networks involving the opercular and insular cortex, areas that manage how we process what we see, hear and feel. It is the brain adjusting its sensitivity and processing levels to a new biological reality.
Perimenopause: the invisible bridge
Perhaps one of the most intriguing data from the study is that no significant differences were found between the group of perimenopausal women and the other two. This doesn't mean that nothing happens; Rather, researchers suggest that perimenopause acts as an active transition state. It is that “meanwhile” moment, where the brain is in the middle of moving, trying to find its new configuration before settling into the postmenopausal stage.
Although the study, based on data from the Human Connectome Project, has the limitations of a measurement at a specific time, it opens a necessary door. With current life expectancy, many women will live decades after menopause. Understanding that the brain is not static and that these changes are part of the process is a first step to stop seeing menopause as a “problem” and start managing it as another stage of human development.
Science is just beginning to scratch the surface. The Vermont team is already working on new lines to understand whether hormonal treatments or certain lifestyle habits can act as “maintenance” for these neural pathways, helping us age with greater mental clarity.
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