- Could Your Grocery Store Meat Be Causing Recurring UTIs?
- Are You Making This Expensive Thermostat Error This Winter?
- Recognizing the Signs of Hypothyroidism
- 10 Strategies to Overcome Insomnia
- Could Artificial Sweeteners Be Aging the Brain Faster?
- Techniques for Soothing Your Nervous System
- Does the Water in Your House Smell Funny? Here’s Why
- Can a Daily Dose of Apple Cider Vinegar Actually Aid Weight Loss?
- 6 Health Beverages That Can Actually Spike Your Blood Sugar
- Treatment Options for Social Anxiety Disorder
Keep Working to Protect Your Brain After a Mild Stroke
Work may be good medicine for the brains of people who suffer mild strokes, a new study out of Israel suggests.
The study included 252 working-age adults whose mental functioning was evaluated one and two years after a mild stroke.
Those who had jobs before and after their stroke were less likely to experience mental decline, the researchers said.
Compared to those who had jobs before their stroke, those who were unemployed were 320 percent more likely to develop mental decline within two years. They were also more likely to have worse depression, unhealthy brain changes, high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes, the study authors reported.
Returning to work was associated with a reduced risk of cognitive decline.
In the two years after a mild stroke, 4.4 percent of the patients died and 8.9 percent developed mental decline, according to the study.
The study findings were presented Wednesday at the American Stroke Association’s International Stroke Conference in Los Angeles.
“Studies have shown stroke greatly increases dementia risk, and occupational status might influence how stroke survivors fare years after having a stroke,” study author Einor Ben Assayag said in an ASA news release.
She is a senior researcher in the Neurology Department at Tel Aviv Sorasky Medical Center.
“The message here is ‘keep on working.’ Rates of death and cognitive decline were higher among the unemployed people we studied. In fact, being unemployed was by itself a risk factor for cognitive decline and death,” Ben Assayag said.
Research presented at medical meetings is considered preliminary, because it has not had the rigorous scrutiny given to published studies.
More information
The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute has more on stroke.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2026 HealthDay. All rights reserved.










