@alice May I ask what the three #vaccines were?

I'm a pharmacist, and I've been a radical PRO-vaxer literally since childhood. Louis Pasteur was one of my childhood heroes. So when I got my first dose of #Shingrix a few years ago, and this brutal adjuvanted vaccine made my whole right arm turn red and warm from the injection site in the deltoid all the way down to my wrist, it didn't bother me in the least. Quite the contrary. I thought, "Good! This is exactly the red alert my immune system needs."

I knew that Shingrix was more effective than the old #Zostavax live vaccine against #shingles, which I had also gotten. Not long ago it had been thought impossible for a recombinant vaccine like Shingrix to be more effective than the best available live vaccine, but the rules are rapidly being rewritten by modern #adjuvant technology.

What I was NOT prepared for was the flood of good news about Shingrix from observational research — the exact opposite of #antivaxer paranoid fantasies. I'll be the first to admit that the picture isn't clear yet — science works by theory based on the accumulated totality of observational and experimental evidence, not by overconfident extrapolation from individual studies. But it’s looking as though Shingrix has astonishing benefits above and beyond its basic purpose of preventing shingles. And the benefits may even extend to other modern adjuvanted vaccines.

Vaccination against shingles was expected to provide some protection against #dementia, simply because herpes #zoster, the virus that causes shingles, is a known risk factor for dementia. But observational studies showed statistically that the reduction in new-onset dementia began right away — too quickly for it to be purely the result of suppression of shingles attacks, which are infrequent. And now evidence is starting to appear that suggests that Shingrix may have a general anti-aging effect through some kind of "tuning" of the immune system — as may at least some other adjuvanted vaccines.

How ironic. This is the kind of very general benefit that homeopaths and such tend to claim, dubiously, for their panaceas — and now it looks as though modern biomedical high technology has achieved it for real, without even trying.

Think about that as your immune system on red alert is making you, very temporarily, feel miserable.

Study raises hopes that
👉shingles vaccine may delay onset of dementia 👈

Researchers have raised hopes for
💥delaying dementia 💥after finding that a recently approved shingles vaccine was linked to a substantial reduction in diagnoses of the condition in the six years after receiving the shot.

The discovery, based on US medical records, suggests that beyond the health benefits of preventing shingles, a painful and sometimes serious condition in elderly people,
♦️the vaccine may also delay the onset of dementia, the UK’s leading cause of death.♦️

Dr Maxime Taquet at the University of Oxford, the first author on the study, said the results supported the idea that shingles vaccination may prevent dementia.
“If validated in clinical trials, these findings could have significant implications for older adults, health services, and public health.”

Shingles is caused by the herpes zoster virus and can flare up in people who have previously had chickenpox.
When a shingles vaccine, #Zostavax, was first rolled out in 2006, a number of studies found hints that the risk of dementia seemed to be lower in those who got the shots.

The development of a new and more effective shingles vaccine, #Shingrix, led to a rapid switch in the US in October 2017, meaning those who were vaccinated before that date received Zostavax, while those vaccinated after tended to have Shingrix.

The Oxford team studied the health records of more than 200,000 US citizens vaccinated for shingles, about half of whom received the new vaccine.
🔸Over the next six years, the risk of dementia was 17% lower in those who received Shingrix compared with Zostavax.🔸
For those who went on to develop dementia, that amounts to an extra 164 days, or nearly six months, lived without the condition.
The effect was stronger in women, at 22%, than in men at 13%.

The researchers went on to examine dementia rates in people who received other vaccines. Writing in Nature Medicine,
they describe how those given Shingrix had a 23 to 27% lower risk of dementia than people who were vaccinated against flu, tetanus, diphtheria or pertussis.

One of the authors of the study, Prof John Todd at Oxford, is a consultant to GSK, the manufacturer of Shingrix, but the researchers said the study was conducted without any involvement from the pharma company, who were informed of the work when it was accepted for publication.
Last year, the NHS made Shingrix available to people turning 65. “The expectation is that if this is indeed a causal effect, then we would see a reduction in dementia in the UK once people start taking up the Shingrix vaccine,” said Taquet.

There are more than 55 million people globally living with dementia and more than 900,000 in the UK alone.
One in three people will develop the condition in their lifetime, and while drugs that appear to slow the disease have recently been approved, there is no cure.

https://www.theguardian.com/society/article/2024/jul/25/shingles-vaccine-shingrix-may-delay-dementia-onset-study?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

Study raises hopes that shingles vaccine may delay onset of dementia

Shingrix linked to substantial reduction in diagnoses in the six years after people received the shot

The Guardian
Does shingles vaccination cut dementia risk? Large study hints at a link
Analysis of nearly 300,000 people finds an association between the shingles jab and a lower rate of dementia — but questions linger.
The analysis found that getting the vaccine lowers the risk of dementia by 20%. But some puzzling aspects of the analysis have stirred debate about the work’s robustness.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-01824-1 3shingles #vaccine #dementia #Zostavax
Does shingles vaccination cut dementia risk? Large study hints at a link

Analysis of nearly 300,000 people finds an association between the shingles jab and a lower rate of dementia — but questions linger.