General

Swedish researchers uncover link between pollution and dementia

Author : NewsGram Desk

Stockholm: Swedish researchers have uncovered a direct link between polluted air and dementia.

People who live in homes exposed more heavily to pollution run a 40 percent greater risk of developing Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia than those who live in areas with cleaner air, a study at Umea University says.

"In total, about 16 percent of all the cases of dementia in the study might have been caused by exposure to pollution," researcher Bertil Forsberg said describing the results as "sensational."

The study, published in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, studied nearly 2,000 people over a 15-year span while simultaneously tracking traffic patterns in the northern Swedish city of Umea, Xinhua news agency reported.

All participants were 55 or older and free of any disease symptoms when the study began.

The researchers established the elevated risk having controlled for factors such as age, education level, lifestyle and body fat.

While previous research linked air pollution to cancer, asthma and respiratory diseases, academics have in recent years begun to probe how air quality affects the brain.

"We know that very small particles can enter the brain through the olfactory nerve and cause direct damage," Forsberg said.

(IANS)

Subscribe to our channels on YouTube and WhatsApp

Download our app on Play Store

Warning of US Unreliability and Israeli ‘Sabotage,’ Iran Refutes Trump Claim of Peace Deal

Trump Aide Claims Americans ‘Spending More Money on Everything’ Shows They’re ‘Optimistic’ About Economy

With Epidemic ‘Outpacing’ Response, WHO Chief Warns Ebola Outbreak Will ‘Get Worse Before It Gets Better’

Burglary Inside High-Security DRDO Complex: Jewellery, Cash Worth Rs 50 Lakh Stolen From Scientist’s Delhi Flat

Mirror Mirror On The Wall, Who's The Fairest Of Them All? A Man Named Chris And a Talking Animal, That’s What