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Infections May Lower Your IQ: Study

Infectious diseases may not only harm your physical health, but also lower your intelligence quotient (IQ): Study

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Infectious diseases may not only harm your physical health, but also lower your intelligence quotient (IQ), a new largest-of-its-kind study has warned.

The study shows that a patient’s distress does not necessarily end once the infection has been treated. In fact, ensuing infections can affect their cognitive ability measured by an IQ test.

“Our research shows a correlation between hospitalisation due to infection and impaired cognition corresponding to an IQ score of 1.76 lower than the average,” said Michael Eriksen Benros, from the National Centre for Register-Based Research at Aarhus University, and the Mental Health Centre Copenhagen, University of Copenhagen.

People with five or more hospital contacts with infections had an IQ score of 9.44 lower than the average. The study thus shows a clear dose-response relationship between the number of infections, and the effect on cognitive ability increased with the temporal proximity of the last infection and with the severity of the infection.
said Eriksen.

“Infections in the brain affected the cognitive ability the most, but many other types of infections severe enough to require hospitalisation can also impair a patient’s cognitive ability.

“Moreover, it seems that the immune system itself can affect the brain to such an extent that the person’s cognitive ability measured by an IQ test will also be impaired many years after the infection has been cured,” said Eriksen.

The study, in which 190,000 Danes participated, is a nationwide register study tracking 190,000 Danes born between 1974 and 1994, who have had their IQ assessed between 2006 and 2012.

35 per cent of these individuals had a hospital contact with infections before the IQ testing was conducted.

“Infections can affect the brain directly, but also through peripheral inflammation, which affects the brain and our mental capacity,” Senior Researcher Michael Eriksen Benros, said.

“Infections have previously been associated with both depression and schizophrenia, and it has also been proven to affect the cognitive ability of patients suffering from dementia,” said Benros.

(At The Quint, we are answerable only to our audience. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member. Because the truth is worth it.)

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Topics:  Infectious diseases 

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