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One of the main causes of pre-eclampsia is a vascular disorder, with inflammation occurring in 2 to 10% of cases, usually 20 weeks after conception.
In addition to blood pressure, preeclampsia can lead to abnormally high levels of protein in the urine and fluid retention.
According to reports from more than a million women in Denmark, the researchers found that the most significant risk to women already infected with preeclampsia was exposure to what is called Vascular dementia, which would result from a series of simple strokes or lack of blood reaching the brain.
The incidence of Alzheimer's disease, a different type of dementia, was only slightly higher than that of women without pre-eclampsia.
The research team said in remarks to BMG Medical Research that previous studies had linked pregnancy intoxication, cognitive impairment, and brain changes in the year that had followed the pregnancy.
Women exposed to preeclampsia are more likely to suffer from heart disease, stroke, hypertension and diabetes later, they said.
"We have gathered enough evidence to assert that the effects of preeclampsia on women's health are not limited to pregnancy," said lead author Heather Boyd of the StatenSymer Institute in Copenhagen.
To determine the links between pre-eclampsia and dementia, researchers used data from the National Register of Surveillance for 117,800 women with children in Denmark between 1978 and 2015. More than four percent of them have had one or more pregnancies during pregnancy.
The researchers then examined women's history for an average of 21 years. Even after adjusting for other factors that may affect the risk of dementia, including heart disease and diabetes, researchers found that the risk of vascular dementia in old age (after age 65) was six and a half times higher. in women infected with pregnancy.
Women who develop pre-eclampsia are twice as likely to die prematurely. They are 50% more likely to develop Alzheimer's disease and 40% more likely to develop dementia.
More than once, the infection is associated with preeclampsia more than once by poisoning caused by a single pregnancy.
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One of the main causes of pre-eclampsia is a vascular disorder, with inflammation occurring in 2 to 10% of cases, usually 20 weeks after conception.
In addition to blood pressure, preeclampsia can lead to abnormally high levels of protein in the urine and fluid retention.
According to reports from more than a million women in Denmark, the researchers found that the most significant risk to women already infected with preeclampsia was exposure to what is called Vascular dementia, which would result from a series of simple strokes or lack of blood reaching the brain.
The incidence of Alzheimer's disease, a different type of dementia, was only slightly higher than that of women without pre-eclampsia.
The research team said in remarks to BMG Medical Research that previous studies had linked pregnancy intoxication, cognitive impairment, and brain changes in the year that had followed the pregnancy.
Women exposed to preeclampsia are more likely to suffer from heart disease, stroke, hypertension and diabetes later, they said.
"We have gathered enough evidence to assert that the effects of preeclampsia on women's health are not limited to pregnancy," said lead author Heather Boyd of the StatenSymer Institute in Copenhagen.
To determine the links between pre-eclampsia and dementia, researchers used data from the National Register of Surveillance for 117,800 women with children in Denmark between 1978 and 2015. More than four percent of them have had one or more pregnancies during pregnancy.
The researchers then examined women's history for an average of 21 years. Even after adjusting for other factors that may affect the risk of dementia, including heart disease and diabetes, researchers found that the risk of vascular dementia in old age (after age 65) was six and a half times higher. in women infected with pregnancy.
Women who develop pre-eclampsia are twice as likely to die prematurely. They are 50% more likely to develop Alzheimer's disease and 40% more likely to develop dementia.
More than once, the infection is associated with preeclampsia more than once by poisoning caused by a single pregnancy.