Science
Related: About this forumNew Study: Common Hospital Infection Could Trigger Alzheimer's
The research found that the bacteria Klebsiella pneumoniae a common bacteria notorious for causing hospital-acquired infections can migrate from the gut into the bloodstream and eventually into the brain. This bacterial invasion may lead to increased inflammation in the brain and impair cognitive functions, mimicking symptoms seen in Alzheimers patients. The work was published in The Journal of Infectious Diseases.
Implications for Hospital-Acquired Infections and Alzheimers Risk
When this happens, K. pneumoniae can move from the gut into the bloodstream by passing through the gut lining and eventually reach the brain, triggering neuroinflammation and neurocognitive impairment.
https://scitechdaily.com/new-study-common-hospital-infection-could-trigger-alzheimers/
CousinIT
(10,080 posts)It's a good idea to take probiotics whenever antibiotics are taken. They may not help, but they can't hurt at all.
BootinUp
(48,901 posts)will come out with some updated recommendations as well.
when you consider the number of people who work in health care and don't develop Alzheimer's dementia.
BootinUp
(48,901 posts)is when this bacteria which is normally present in the gut, gets in the blood and/or brain, does that have a causal relationship with Alzheimers. Apparently this condition is known to occur in hospital patients as described here https://www.healthline.com/health/klebsiella-pneumonia#causes. I do not know if it is known to occur in hospital workers, are you saying it is?
Warpy
(113,130 posts)most godawful bugs known to medical science and that's one one of them.
BootinUp
(48,901 posts)Warpy
(113,130 posts)can be found in or on the body. It's why we mask and glove and spend so much time washing our hands.
It means there are small colonies of nasty bugs, kept in check by a healthy immune system.
Epidemiologists have implicated other infectious organisms with initiating Alzheimer's, this isn't the first time. None of the research has come up with a clear link.
I think it will turn out to be a genetiaclly programmed autoimmune disease, most people starting to show signs like decreased vocabulary in their 50s and 60s even if they don't develop clear signs of dementia until their 80s or 90s. That's certainly the case in early onset Alzheimer's, most cases traced back to a family in Nonza, Italy.
BootinUp
(48,901 posts)Still, I wonder if the paper is available to read. I might try to find it.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)There's not a link I could see to the actual paper, but my eyesight sucks and I miss a lot.
I'll try to understand some of it. Thank You!
https://academic.oup.com/jid/article/230/Supplement_2/S95/7754705?login=false
SCantiGOP
(14,201 posts)She says that as far as disease is concerned, a hospital is the most dangerous place a healthy person can be.
Ysabel
(2,032 posts)I was afraid I'd catch something I touched a table in my son's room to move it and it had a nasty bit of gooey stuff on the underside of it. It got all over my hands and it stuck. I had to wash off in the bathroom and it was real hard to get off...
- and when I was staying in the hospital myself a whole lot of the staff were sick I was afraid I'd catch something from them some of them didn't even wear gloves which I thought was a bit odd...