So with your increased risk of dementia post stroke your doctor will need to come up with OTHER EXACT PROTOCOLS TO PREVENT DEMENTIA.
Your doctor's responsibility!
Your risk of dementia, has your doctor told you of this?
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
I'm going to be doing my own thing, which you shouldn't do since I'm not medically trained.
Dementia prevention 19 ways per Dean.
Risk reduction of cognitive decline and dementia: WHO guidelines
The latest here:
Does Multicomponent Physical Exercise Training Work for Dementia? Exploring the Effects on Cognition, Neuropsychiatric Symptoms, and Quality of Life
Abstract
Objective
To
explore the effects of a multicomponent training (MT) physical exercise
intervention in the cognitive function, neuropsychiatric symptoms, and
quality of life of older adults with major neurocognitive disorder
(NCD).
Methods
Quasi-experimental
controlled trial. Thirty-six individuals (25 female) were equally
distributed to an exercise group (aged 74.33 ± 5.87 years) or a control
group (aged 81.83 ± 6.18 years). The Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment
Scale – Cognitive (ADAS-Cog), the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) and
the Quality of Life – Alzheimer’s Disease (QoL-AD) tests were performed
before and after the intervention.
Results
There was no clear interaction effect factor of intervention on ADAS-Cog (B = 1.33, 95% CI: -2.61 – 5.28, P = .513), NPI (B = −8.35, 95% CI: −18.48 – 1.72, P = .115), and QoL-AD (B = 2.87, 95% CI: .01 – 5.73, P = .058).
Conclusions
The
6-month MT physical exercise intervention did not present evidence of
slowing down cognitive decline neither improving neuropsychiatric
symptomatology, and quality of life of older adults with major NCD.
Future studies with larger samples are needed to better understand the
impact of physical exercise interventions using MT methodology on
specific cognitive abilities, neuropsychiatric symptoms, and quality of
life domains.
Background
Along
with the decline in cognitive function that characterizes a
neurocognitive disorder (NCD), individuals may suffer from the
progressive severity of behavioral and psychological symptoms (e.g.,
agitation, apathy, anxiety, hallucinations, eating disorders, nighttime
behaviors) that often lead to a lower quality of life.1
Physical exercise, as a promising non-pharmacological therapeutical approach within dementia care2-4 is regularly recommended given its potential positive effects on cognitive function,5-9 neuropsychiatric symptomatology,10,11 and quality of life12 of individuals with major NCD.
However,
according to previous systematic reviews and meta-analytic studies, it
remains unclear whether physical exercise might slow down the decline of
global cognition or improve specific cognitive domains (i.e., executive
functions, complex attention, memory, among other abilities).13-16 Similarly, the role of physical exercise on alleviating challenging behaviours and mood disturbances is still limited17-20 particularly in what regards other symptoms rather than depression.16,21,22
Also, there’s still insufficient and inconsistent data on the
effectiveness of well-promising physical exercise interventions on
quality of life.23-26
Multicomponent training (MT) (i.e., a combination of balance, strength, aerobic, gait and physical function training)27 has been recently recommended for older adults with Alzheimer’s disease2,28,29
and would seem advisable to individuals with major NCD due to other
etiological conditions (e.g., vascular disease). Nevertheless, despite
its positive influence on functional capacity,30,31
few studies have focused on its effects on psychosocial outcomes. This
study aims to explore the contribution of a 6-month community-based MT
physical exercise intervention on the cognitive function,
neuropsychiatric symptomatology, and quality of life of older adults
diagnosed with major NCD.
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