Showing posts with label function. Show all posts
Showing posts with label function. Show all posts

Wednesday 18 December 2019

Hypothyroidism Affects The Brain

Hypothyroidism Affects The Brain.
Hypothyroidism, a form that causes low or no thyroid hormone production, is not linked to submissive dementia or impaired brain function, a new investigation suggests. Although more research is needed, the scientists said their findings add to mounting ground that the thyroid gland disorder is not tied to the memory and thinking problems known as "mild cognitive impairment". Some ex evidence has suggested that changes in the body's endocrine system, including thyroid function, might be linked to Alzheimer's blight and other forms of dementia, said researchers led by Dr Ajay Parsaik, of the University of Texas Medical School in Houston.

Mild cognitive impairment, in particular, is cogitation to be an cock's-crow warning sign of the memory-robbing disorder Alzheimer's disease, the scrutinize authors said in a university news release. In conducting the study, Parsaik's group examined a group of more than 1900 people, including those with mild and more severe cases of hypothyroidism. The participants, who were from the same Minnesota county, were between 70 and 89 years of age.

Monday 18 April 2016

Body Weight Affects Kidney Disease

Body Weight Affects Kidney Disease.
Obesity increases the endanger of developing kidney disease, a budding study suggests. Moreover, declines in kidney function can be detected dream of before people develop other obesity-related diseases such as diabetes and high blood pressure, the researchers said in Dec, 2013. The researchers analyzed statistics collected from nearly 3000 swart and white young adults who had normal kidney function. The participants, who had an average life-span of 35, were grouped according to four ranges of body-mass index (BMI), a measurement of body fat based on extreme and weight.

The groups were normal weight, overweight, obese and extremely obese. Over time, kidney ceremony decreased in all the participants, but the decline was much greater and quicker in overweight and overweight people, and appeared to be linked solely with body-mass index. "When we accounted for diabetes, turned on blood pressure and inflammatory processes, body-mass index was still a predictor of kidney function decline," inspect first author Dr Vanessa Grubbs, an assistant adjunct professor of cure-all at the University of California, San Francisco, said in a university news release.