TY - JOUR
T1 - Hysterectomy Uniquely Impacts Spatial Memory in a Rat Model
T2 - A Role for the Nonpregnant Uterus in Cognitive Processes
AU - Koebele, Stephanie V.
AU - Palmer, Justin M.
AU - Hadder, Bryanna
AU - Melikian, Ryan
AU - Fox, Carly
AU - Strouse, Isabel M.
AU - Denardo, Dale
AU - George, Christina
AU - Daunis, Emily
AU - Nimer, Adrianna
AU - Mayer, Loretta P.
AU - Dyer, Cheryl A.
AU - Bimonte-Nelson, Heather
N1 - Funding Information:
FinancialSupport: H.A.B.-N.issupportedbythefollowing: National Institute on Aging Grant AG028084; state of Arizona, ArizonaDepartmentofHealthServicesGrantADHS14-052688; National Institutes of Health Alzheimer’s Disease Core Center Grant P30AG019610; and by funding from Arizona State University Office of Knowledge Enterprise Development, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Department of Psychology. S.V.K. is supported by the following: National Institute on Aging Grant 1F31AG056110-01A1.
Funding Information:
We gratefully acknowledge Dr. Julia Files, Dr. Javier Magrina, and Dr. Kristina Butler for invaluable discussion of the hysterectomy model. Steroid hormone assays were determined by the Core Endocrine Laboratory at Pennsylvania State University, for which we acknowledge Dr. Laurence Demers with gratitude. LH, FSH, and AMH assays were determined by the Ligand Assay and Analysis Core of the Center for Research in Reproduction at the University of Virginia School of Medicine, for which we thank Dr. Daniel Haisenleder and Aleisha Schoenfelder. The University of Virginia Center for Research in Reproduction Ligand Assay and Analysis Core is supported by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development/ National Institutes of Health (NCTRI) Grant P50-HD28934.
Funding Information:
H.A.B.-N.issupportedbythefollowing: National Institute on Aging Grant AG028084; state of Arizona, ArizonaDepartmentofHealthServicesGrantADHS14-052688; National Institutes of Health Alzheimer s Disease Core Center Grant P30AG019610; and by funding from Arizona State University Office of Knowledge Enterprise Development, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, andDepartment ofPsychology. S.V.K. is supported by the following: National Institute on Aging Grant 1F31AG056110-01A1.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Endocrine Society.
PY - 2019/1/1
Y1 - 2019/1/1
N2 - Approximately one-third of women experience hysterectomy, or the surgical removal of the uterus, by 60 years of age, with most surgeries occurring prior to the onset of natural menopause. The ovaries are retained in about half of these surgeries, whereas for the other half hysterectomy occurs concurrently with oophorectomy. The dogma is that the nonpregnant uterus is dormant. There have been no preclinical assessments of surgical variations in menopause, including hysterectomy, with and without ovarian conservation, on potential endocrine and cognitive changes. We present a novel rat model of hysterectomy alongside sham, ovariectomy (Ovx), and Ovxhysterectomy groups to assess effects of surgical menopause variations. Rats without ovaries learned the working memory domain of a complex cognitive task faster than did those with ovaries. Moreover, uterus removal alone had a unique detrimental impact on the ability to handle a highdemand working memory load. The addition of Ovx, that is, Ovx-hysterectomy, prevented this hysterectomy-induced memory deficit. Performance did not differ amongst groups in reference memory only tasks, suggesting that the working memory domain is particularly sensitive to variations in surgical menopause. Following uterus removal, ovarian histology and estrous cycle monitoring demonstrated that ovaries continued to function, and serum assays indicated altered ovarian hormone and gonadotropin profiles by 2 months after surgery. These results underscore the critical need to further study the contribution of the uterus to the female phenotype, including effects of hysterectomy with and without ovarian conservation, on the trajectory of brain and endocrine aging to decipher the impact of common variations in gynecological surgery in women. Moreover, findings demonstrate that the nonpregnant uterus is not dormant, and indicate that there is an ovarian-uterus-brain system that becomes interrupted when the reproductive tract has been disrupted, leading to alterations in brain functioning.
AB - Approximately one-third of women experience hysterectomy, or the surgical removal of the uterus, by 60 years of age, with most surgeries occurring prior to the onset of natural menopause. The ovaries are retained in about half of these surgeries, whereas for the other half hysterectomy occurs concurrently with oophorectomy. The dogma is that the nonpregnant uterus is dormant. There have been no preclinical assessments of surgical variations in menopause, including hysterectomy, with and without ovarian conservation, on potential endocrine and cognitive changes. We present a novel rat model of hysterectomy alongside sham, ovariectomy (Ovx), and Ovxhysterectomy groups to assess effects of surgical menopause variations. Rats without ovaries learned the working memory domain of a complex cognitive task faster than did those with ovaries. Moreover, uterus removal alone had a unique detrimental impact on the ability to handle a highdemand working memory load. The addition of Ovx, that is, Ovx-hysterectomy, prevented this hysterectomy-induced memory deficit. Performance did not differ amongst groups in reference memory only tasks, suggesting that the working memory domain is particularly sensitive to variations in surgical menopause. Following uterus removal, ovarian histology and estrous cycle monitoring demonstrated that ovaries continued to function, and serum assays indicated altered ovarian hormone and gonadotropin profiles by 2 months after surgery. These results underscore the critical need to further study the contribution of the uterus to the female phenotype, including effects of hysterectomy with and without ovarian conservation, on the trajectory of brain and endocrine aging to decipher the impact of common variations in gynecological surgery in women. Moreover, findings demonstrate that the nonpregnant uterus is not dormant, and indicate that there is an ovarian-uterus-brain system that becomes interrupted when the reproductive tract has been disrupted, leading to alterations in brain functioning.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85058764942&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85058764942&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1210/en.2018-00709
DO - 10.1210/en.2018-00709
M3 - Article
C2 - 30535329
AN - SCOPUS:85058764942
SN - 0013-7227
VL - 160
SP - 1
EP - 19
JO - Endocrinology
JF - Endocrinology
IS - 1
ER -