Long Covid may spike early risk of dementia

13 September 2021, 5:44 pm
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Covid survivors who continue to experience poor concentration, memory difficulties and other cognitive issues may be at high risk of developing dementia years later, according to a research.

There is also growing concern that some of these “long-haulers” may get the dementia-related changes earlier than expected, the Strait Times reported.

“Anything that diminishes a person’s cognitive reserve and resilience is going to allow neurodegenerative processes to accelerate,” Alireza Atri, cognitive disorder neurologist, director of Banner Sun Health Research Institute, was quoted as saying.

This can then cause symptoms of neurological disorders, such as dementia, to show earlier, he added.

Dementia is a general term for the impaired ability to remember, think or make decisions that hinders a person’s daily life. It results from diseases such as Alzheimer’s and injuries that affect the brain, and mainly affects people 65 and above.

Atri said Covid-19 could aggravate this process and hasten cognitive decline, and then dementia, the report said.

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