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Study: COVID-19 May Be Linked with Higher Alzheimer's Risk
Aside from the potential curse of long COVID, people who've had the SARS-CoV-2 virus may be more likely to develop high levels of biomarkers for brain proteins linked to Alzheimer's disease, scientists report in a new study.
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LampLighter
Joined 2013/04/13Visited 2025/02/08
Status: user
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Does COVID increase the risk of Alzheimer's disease? www.news-medical.net/news/2025020 ... #Alzheimers #BrainHealth #Neurology #COVID19 #Aging #DementiaRisk #Neurodegeneration #LongCOVID #MedicalResearch #PublicHealth[image or embed] -- News Medical (@newsmedical.bsky.social) February 2, 2025 at 10:20 PM
Does COVID increase the risk of Alzheimer's disease? www.news-medical.net/news/2025020 ... #Alzheimers #BrainHealth #Neurology #COVID19 #Aging #DementiaRisk #Neurodegeneration #LongCOVID #MedicalResearch #PublicHealth[image or embed]
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More from the article ...
... The average estimated effect of the virus on beta amyloid proteins was comparable to the effect from four years of aging, researchers found. The difference was most pronounced in patients who'd been hospitalized with severe COVID-19, the study found, or in those with underlying risk factors for dementia, like high blood pressure. These results hint at yet another insidious effect of COVID, the researchers write, suggesting even mild or moderate cases might speed up biological processes promoting the accumulation of beta amyloid proteins, which previous research has linked with Alzheimer's. There are important caveats to note, however. For one, this was an observational study, so it can establish correlation but not causation. ...
The difference was most pronounced in patients who'd been hospitalized with severe COVID-19, the study found, or in those with underlying risk factors for dementia, like high blood pressure.
These results hint at yet another insidious effect of COVID, the researchers write, suggesting even mild or moderate cases might speed up biological processes promoting the accumulation of beta amyloid proteins, which previous research has linked with Alzheimer's.
There are important caveats to note, however. For one, this was an observational study, so it can establish correlation but not causation. ...
#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-02-06 10:55 PM | Reply
... and before JPW gives my grief on this (appropriately, I will add), I want to point attention to the last sentence of @#1.
Yeah, this seems to be preliminary at this point.
I look forward to future studies.
#2 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-02-06 10:58 PM | Reply
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