Not sure what you could do about this anyway.
http://dgnews.docguide.com/colds-flu-may-temporarily-increase-stroke-risk-kids?
Colds, the flu, and other minor infections may temporarily increase
stroke risk in children, according to a study published in the September
30, 2015, online issue of the journal Neurology.
The study also found routine childhood vaccines may decrease the risk of stroke.
“Parents should be reassured that while the risk was increased, the
overall risk of stroke among children is still extremely low,” said José
Biller, MD, Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine,
Chicago, Illinois. “It is possible that changes in the body as a result
of these infections, such as inflammation and dehydration, could tip the
balance in a child who is already at a higher risk for stroke. Parents
should not be alarmed if their child has a cold that it will lead to a
stroke.”
For the study, researchers reviewed the medical charts and conducted
parent interviews of 355 children aged younger than 18 years diagnosed
with a stroke and 354 children of similar age who never had a stroke.
The researchers looked at whether the children had been exposed to
infection and also their vaccine history.
Of the participants, 18% of the children with stroke had an infection
the week before the stroke occurred and 3% of the children who did not
have a stroke had an infection the week before the interview with
researchers. The children with a stroke were 6 times more likely to have
an infection in the previous week than those who did not have a stroke.
The researchers found that the risk of stroke was increased only for
infections in the prior week, indicating that the effect of infection on
stroke risk is short-lived. Infections that occurred a month or 6
months prior were not associated with an increased risk.
Children who were poorly vaccinated were at a higher risk of stroke
than those who had most or all of their routine vaccinations. Children
who had received some, few, or none of their routine vaccinations were 7
times more likely to have a stroke than those who received most or all
of their vaccines. Eight percent of the children with strokes were
poorly vaccinated, compared with 1% of those who did not have strokes.
“If our results hold up in further studies, controlling infections
like colds and flu through hand-washing and vaccines may be a strategy
for preventing stroke in children,” said co-author Heather J. Fullerton,
MD, University of California San Francisco’s Benioff Children’s
Hospital, San Francisco, California.
She noted that the study expands on an earlier study by her group
with similar findings. The current study has a larger sample size,
broader geographic representation, prospective enrolment, and central
review of brain imaging to confirm the stroke cases.
SOURCE: American Academy of Neurology
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