People with High Psychological Pressure Are More Susceptible to Alzheimer
Medical study found that people who were easy to feel psychological pressure were more likely to suffer from an Alzheimer. Research from Rush University of Chicago found that people who were attacked by negative emotions such as depression and anxiety had double the chance to suffer from Alzheimer than the open-minded people. The study was published in the magazine called Neuroiogy.
The researchers surveyed 797 Catholic nuns, priests and priests with 75 years old on average. The results showed that antidepressant drugs can reduce the risk of suffering from Alzheimer’s syndrome. Dr. Wilson, the leader of the study, said the feeling the pressure varied, but the feelings of stress in everyone’s life remained virtually unchanged. He believed that this latest finding was so significant because there were evidences that many of the pressures produced in the brain can be limited via drugs, including antidepressants.
The researchers examined the brains of 141 people who died during the investigation. Among them, 57 people suffered from Alzheimer. The researchers found that those who can’t stand the pressure didn’t show signs of worries as patients with Alzheimer’s syndrome. There were not tangled proteins in brain. Therefore the researchers ruled out the conclusion that high pressure is early symptoms of Alzheimer’s syndrome.

