
Every 40 seconds someone in the U.S. suffers a stroke. In fact, 800,000 Americans suffer a stroke every year.
While a stroke often has short-term health consequences for those who survive, such as partial paralysis, inability to speak and memory loss, stroke also presents a long-term risk to your intellectual abilites. The latest research shows that having a stroke can dramatically increase your risk of Alzheimer’s disease.
There are two main types of strokes – ischemic and hemorraghic. A hemorrhagic stroke occurs when an artery supplying blood to the brain fails and begins to bleed. An ischemic stroke results from an artery blockage that cuts off blood flow to a part of the brain. The latter are the most common, affecting 87 percent of stroke victims. They also appear to be the most dangerous to your memory.
A study in Israel shows that suffering from an ischemic stroke doubles your chance of dementia. What’s more, the risk increases even further if the stroke is very severe or if you suffer from more than one stroke.1
In the study, researchers analyzed the health data of more than 15,000 people aged 45 to just 64 over a period of about 30 years. The researchers discovered that having three or more strokes increased the risk of dementia by an alarming 8.5 times!
What’s more, even having one severe stroke multiplied the dementia risk by five times when compared to someone who’d only had one minor stroke.
But there’s good news. By following a few lifestyle tips to lower your risk for stroke, you can also lower your risk for memory loss later in life.
Fortunately, there’s plenty of research that shows how simple, healthy lifestyle changes can protect you against both strokes and dementia.
For example, a large study in Ontario, Canada found that a public health stroke prevention program emphasizing healthy habits reduced the rate of both stroke and dementia in seniors. The widespread health education program focused on getting people to give up smoking, exercise more and control their blood pressure. During this research, scientists analyzed information on the overall health, not merely instances of stroke and dementia, from 5.5 million people in Ontario over 12 years.
They found the incidence of stroke dropped for participants in the program over the age of 50. And for people over the age of 80, strokes fell by 37.9 percent, while the incidence of Alzheimer’s and other types of dementia declined by 15.4 percent.2
If you’re ready to get your own stroke risk under better control, here’s what to do:
The research is clear: By protecting your body against stroke of any kind, you’re not only protecting your heart, you’re protecting your brain and lowering your risk of eventually developing Alzheimer’s disease or some other type of memory-robbing dementia.
Best of all, by following the simple healthy lifestyle changes we advise in this newsletter every week you’re already a giant leap ahead in stroke prevention.
