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Coventina

(29,091 posts)
Thu Apr 3, 2025, 06:14 PM Apr 2025

Shingles Vaccine Can Decrease Risk of Dementia, Study Finds

Getting vaccinated against shingles can reduce the risk of developing dementia, a large new study finds.

The results provide some of the strongest evidence yet that some viral infections can have effects on brain function years later and that preventing them can help stave off cognitive decline.

The study, published on Wednesday in the journal Nature, found that people who received the shingles vaccine were 20 percent less likely to develop dementia in the seven years afterward than those who were not vaccinated.

“If you’re reducing the risk of dementia by 20 percent, that’s quite important in a public health context, given that we don’t really have much else at the moment that slows down the onset of dementia,” said Dr. Paul Harrison, a professor of psychiatry at Oxford. Dr. Harrison was not involved in the new study, but has done other research indicating that shingles vaccines lower dementia risk.

Whether the protection can last beyond seven years can only be determined with further research. But with few currently effective treatments or preventions, Dr. Harrison said, shingles vaccines appear to have “some of the strongest potential protective effects against dementia that we know of that are potentially usable in practice.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/02/health/shingles-vaccine-dementia.html

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Well, all the anti-vax MAGAts will lose their minds.....

14 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Shingles Vaccine Can Decrease Risk of Dementia, Study Finds (Original Post) Coventina Apr 2025 OP
I just got my second shingles vaccination about two weeks ago LetMyPeopleVote Apr 2025 #1
Did you have any side effects? Littlered Apr 2025 #5
My arm was fairly sore after first shot for about three or four days LetMyPeopleVote Apr 2025 #6
Thank you, n/t. Littlered Apr 2025 #10
I had no side effects tavernier Apr 2025 #9
Thank you n/t. Littlered Apr 2025 #11
Read up on shingles. That will worry you more. WhiskeyGrinder Apr 2025 #12
I've had the shingles vaccine and it wasn't bad. yardwork Apr 2025 #14
They already lost their minds a long time ago 😹 Meowmee Apr 2025 #2
Glad I got my I_UndergroundPanther Apr 2025 #3
I never had the vaccine but I had shingles a number of years ago, not fun...Will I still be Immune? wcmagumba Apr 2025 #4
Yes it is still recommended Meowmee Apr 2025 #7
Oh, do you have to keep getting the shingles vaccine? pinkstarburst Apr 2025 #13
Nice to hear, thank you NT Tickle Apr 2025 #8
 

Littlered

(347 posts)
5. Did you have any side effects?
Thu Apr 3, 2025, 06:25 PM
Apr 2025

For reasons I don’t fully understand, that one worries me. And this is coming from someone who feels like they are gonna need hospitalized after every Covid booster, lol.

LetMyPeopleVote

(174,663 posts)
6. My arm was fairly sore after first shot for about three or four days
Thu Apr 3, 2025, 06:38 PM
Apr 2025

I did not feel much for the second shot

tavernier

(14,251 posts)
9. I had no side effects
Fri Apr 4, 2025, 06:00 AM
Apr 2025

The injections themselves were painless, but after several hours my arm (both times) was quite sore. But certainly worth the discomfort for rhe protection.

WhiskeyGrinder

(26,224 posts)
12. Read up on shingles. That will worry you more.
Sat Apr 5, 2025, 07:56 AM
Apr 2025

One out of three people who had chicken pox will get shingles.

yardwork

(68,938 posts)
14. I've had the shingles vaccine and it wasn't bad.
Sat Apr 5, 2025, 08:39 AM
Apr 2025

I think my arm was sore for a few days. Nothing like COVID vaccines for me. (For those I have to set aside a weekend to recover.)

Meowmee

(9,212 posts)
2. They already lost their minds a long time ago 😹
Thu Apr 3, 2025, 06:16 PM
Apr 2025

I still have to get mine. My brother just got his first shot yesterday. I would like to see the actual research, I'll look it up.

wcmagumba

(5,576 posts)
4. I never had the vaccine but I had shingles a number of years ago, not fun...Will I still be Immune?
Thu Apr 3, 2025, 06:25 PM
Apr 2025

Meowmee

(9,212 posts)
7. Yes it is still recommended
Fri Apr 4, 2025, 12:33 AM
Apr 2025

Shingles is caused by a herpes related virus- varicella roster... once you have chicken pox it goes into your nervous system and is dormant, it can come out at any time from lowered immunity, stress etc. The vaccine will suppress a reactivation for 7-10 years. Both my father and brother had shingles but they had mild cases. My brother just got his shot, so yes. It also costs $500 without coverage, so better to get it now before they start trying to nix not only many vaccines but also medicare and coverage for them most likely.

If you didn't have chicken pox but had the vaccine, you are somewhat protected but not completely so it's still recommended to have the shingles vaccine: Shingrix, which is different than the chicken pox vaccine: Varicella.

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/varicella-zoster-virus

https://www.health.ny.gov/diseases/communicable/shingles/fact_sheet.htm#:~:text=What%20is%20shingles?,a%20vaccine%20to%20prevent%20shingles.

pinkstarburst

(1,874 posts)
13. Oh, do you have to keep getting the shingles vaccine?
Sat Apr 5, 2025, 08:35 AM
Apr 2025

So you have to get it every 10 years as a booster after the initial 2 doses of Shingrix? I didn't know that protection only lasts 10 years.

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