You as a stroke survivor are much more likely to get it. So ask your doctor for something more useful than what is mentioned here.
Your chances of getting dementia.
1. A documented 33% dementia chance post-stroke from an Australian study? May 2012.
2. Then this study came out and seems to have a range from 17-66%. December 2013.
3. A 20% chance in this research. July 2013.
4. Dementia Risk Doubled in Patients Following Stroke September 2018
5. Parkinson’s Disease May Have Link to Stroke March 2017
I'm doing this.
Dementia prevention 19 ways
Don't follow me, I'm not medically trained.
Will you get dementia? Many may not understand their risk
Many
older American adults may inaccurately estimate their chances for
developing dementia and do useless things to prevent it, new research
suggests.
Almost
half of adults surveyed believed they were likely to develop dementia.
The results suggest many didn’t understand the connection between
physical health and brain health and how racial differences can affect
dementia risk.
Substantial
numbers of people who rated their health as fair or poor thought their
dementia chances were low. At the same time, many who said they were in
excellent health said they were likely to develop the memory robbing
disease.
Many
said they tried at least one of four unproven memory-protecting
methods, including taking supplements like fish oil and ginkgo. The most
popular strategy was doing crossword puzzles. Mental stimulation is
thought to help, but there’s stronger evidence for more challenging
activities than puzzles — things like playing chess, taking a class,
reading about unfamiliar topics, said Keith Fargo, who oversees research
and outreach programs at the Alzheimer’s Association. He was not
involved in the study.
Research
has shown that regular exercise, a good diet, limiting alcohol and not
smoking make dementia less likely. Supplements have not been shown to
help.
“We
really haven’t done a good job of getting the word out that there
really are things you can do to lower your risk,” said Dr. Donovan
Maust, the study’s lead author and a geriatric psychiatrist at the
University of Michigan.
The study
was published online Friday in JAMA Neurology. It’s based on a
nationally representative health survey of 1,000 adults aged 50 to 64.
The
survey asked people to assess their likelihood of developing dementia
and whether they had ever discussed ways to prevent it with their
doctor. Few people said they had, regardless of their self-rated risk
for dementia.
The
results raise concerns because doctors can help people manage
conditions such as high blood pressure and diabetes that have been
linked with dementia risk, Maust, said.
Among
those who said their physical health was only fair or poor, a
substantial 40% thought they were at low risk for Alzheimer’s disease or
other dementia. Almost the same portion rated their chances as likely
even though they reported very good or excellent physical health.
More
whites than blacks or Hispanics surveyed believed they were likely to
develop dementia and almost two-thirds of blacks said they were
unlikely. Only 93 blacks were surveyed, making it difficult to
generalize those results to all U.S. blacks. But U.S. minorities face
higher risks for dementia than whites — blacks face double the risk —
and the Alzheimer’s group has programs in black and Hispanic
communities.
“There’s lots of work to do ... to educate the public so they can take some actions to protect themselves,” Fargo said.
One
in three seniors die with Alzheimer’s or other dementias, according to
the Alzheimer’s Association. While there are no medicines or medical
treatments proven to prevent it, rigorous European studies have shown
that healthy lifestyles may help prevent mental decline. The Alzheimer’s
Association is sponsoring similar U.S. research.
The
new study used data from the University of Michigan National Poll on
Healthy Aging. Adults were surveyed online in October 2018. Funding came
from AARP, the University of Michigan health system and U.S. government
grants.
___
Follow AP Medical Writer Lindsey Tanner at @LindseyTanner.
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