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Is it possible that cataract surgery can protect you from dementia?


Cataract surgery has become extremely safe and commonplace in the United States over the last few decades. An estimated two million Americans, largely seniors, undergo this treatment each year. By 2050, the population may have doubled, or perhaps tripled.

Even though many of us think that cataract surgery only helps us see better, new research shows that it may also help us think better and avoid dementia.

  

According to research, there is a link between eyesight loss and dementia.


Recent studies have discovered a relationship between dementia and age-related macular degeneration, cataracts, or diabetes-related eye illness. In one study, elderly people whose vision deteriorated during an eight-year period had a higher chance of dementia.

So, may preventing or correcting vision loss help to lessen dementia risk? Previous research has yielded conflicting results. According to a 2015 study, cataract surgery is connected to a lower risk of dementia in the future. The results of a 2018 study found no benefit in terms of dementia risk, but there was a lower rate of mild cognitive impairment. The disparities in findings could be explained by differences in study populations and techniques, particularly in the diagnosis of dementia.

There's new evidence that cataract surgery can help people avoid dementia.


A recent study published in JAMA Internal Medicine suggests that removing cataracts may lower your risk of dementia. It looks into how cataract surgery affects the risk of dementia over time in over 3,000 older people with cataracts or glaucoma. At the start of the trial, no one had dementia.

  

According to the research,


People who had cataract surgery had a 29% lower risk of developing dementia than those who did not.

Whether glaucoma patients had surgery or not, the risk of dementia was the same. (It's worth noting that glaucoma surgery doesn't help you see again.)

Because of differences in health or access to health care, the study's findings were not likely to be caused by those things. Also, other dementia risk factors were not likely to have been the cause. The findings remained the same once these variables were taken into account.

The researchers point out that while the findings are compelling, they must be confirmed by others. Future research should involve a more varied population: the majority of study participants were white, and they all had easy access to complete health care, including cataract surgery.


There is currently no safe place in Ukraine, and the situation is changing by the hour. All children across the region are now in grave danger of physical harm and severe emotional distress.

So please, let’s do what we do best: let’s gather together our network of friends, family and colleagues and fundraise for the innocent children of Ukraine.

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Violence and explosions have been reported in the capital of Kyiv and other major cities – forcing children and families into basements and bomb shelters. At least 100,000 have already been forced to flee their homes. As temperatures drop below freezing, displaced children could face long days and nights exposed to brutal conditions.
Russia ignores ceasefire, trapping thousands


Last week, a sliver of good news arrived when authorities from Ukraine and Russia agreed to create safe corridors to allow civilians to be evacuated. Unfortunately, that hope was dashed when Russia broke the brief ceasefire, forcing Mariupol to suspend evacuations for two days in a row.

The port city is encircled by Russian soldiers and has been shelled on a regular basis. The inhabitants of Mariupol are in a rapidly deteriorating condition since the city has been without heat, food, or electricity for days.

On March 14, France will partially abolish the requirement for COVID vaccination in passports.

If you're ready to cross the Atlantic again, France is going to make your journey much easier.

Starting next week (March 14), France will no longer require vaccinations to access indoor facilities, removing the necessity for visitors to get a Health Pass prior to arrival.

Face masks will likewise be unnecessary indoors, with the exception of public transportation.

Americans who have had their Covid vaccine up to date—including a booster if it's been more than 9 months—can now travel to France without a test or health pass. Unvaccinated Americans will need to present a "compelling reason" for entering France, as well as a negative Covid test because the US is still on France's orange list.

Hello, every in Ukraine.

Glovo generously support that you and all yours are close to safety

These days, Glovo is trying to support Ukrainians: their correspondents, couriers, partners, ZSU. To that, they have already introduced the robot from delivery to other places: Lviv, Chernivtsi, Odesa, Chornomorsk, Ivano-Frankivsk, Rivne, Ternopil, Lutsk, Khmelnytsky, Kropyvnytsky, Kryvyi Rig, Uzhgorod, Drohobych, Chernivtsi, Zaporizhzhya, Vіkasypro, Vіkasіpro.


Priority is given to the bubbles of “Pharmacy” and “Supermarkets”. The delivery time will be fixed. All income will be transferred to ZSU. At the time of the appearance of unsafe minds, the prayer can be scrambled automatically, and all your cats will be turned to you on the rahunka.
No content on this site, regardless of date, should be used to replace direct medical advice from your doctor or another trained practitioner.
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