Literature Review

Neurological Disorders Now Top Global Cause of Illness, Disability


 

FROM THE LANCET NEUROLOGY

Prioritize Prevention

The analysis also provides estimates of the proportion of neurological conditions that are potentially preventable by eliminating known risk factors for stroke, dementia, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, encephalitis, meningitis, and intellectual disability.

It shows that modifying 18 risk factors over a person’s lifetime — most importantly high systolic blood pressure — could prevent 84% of global DALYs from stroke. Controlling lead exposure could lower intellectual disability cases by 63% and reducing high fasting plasma glucose to normal levels could cut dementia by roughly 15%.

“Because many neurological conditions lack cures, and access to medical care is often limited, understanding modifiable risk factors and the potentially avoidable neurological condition burden is essential to help curb this global health crisis,” co-lead author Katrin Seeher, PhD, mental health specialist with WHO’s brain health unit, said in the release.

It’s important to note that nervous system conditions include infectious and vector-borne diseases and injuries as well as noncommunicable diseases and injuries, Dr. Steinmetz said, “demanding different strategies for prevention and treatment throughout life.”

“We hope that our findings can help policymakers more comprehensively understand the impact of neurological conditions on both adults and children to inform more targeted interventions in individual countries, as well as guide ongoing awareness and advocacy efforts around the world,” Dr. Steinmetz added.

In an accompanying editorial, Wolfgang Grisold, MD, president of the World Federation of Neurology, London, noted that the study builds on previous findings and expands the number of neurological conditions studied from 15 to 37.

“This important new GBD report highlights that the burden of neurological conditions is greater than previously thought,” wrote Dr. Grisold, who was not a part of the study. “In the next iteration, more attention should be given to neuromuscular diseases, the effects of cancer in the nervous system, and neuropathic pain. Comparing the disability caused by conditions with episodic occurrence versus those that cause permanent and progressive disease will remain challenging because the effects on the individuals vary substantially.”

The study was funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Full disclosures are included in the original article.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

5 Interesting Neurology Studies
MDedge Internal Medicine
‘Remarkable’ Study Tracks Timeline of Biomarker Changes 20 Years Before Alzheimer’s disease
MDedge Internal Medicine
Promising New Wearable Could Retrain the Brain After Stroke
MDedge Internal Medicine
A New Biomarker of Brain Injury?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Air Pollution Tied to Greater Amyloid Burden in the Brain
MDedge Internal Medicine
New Data Support Viagra for Alzheimer’s Prevention
MDedge Internal Medicine
Service Dogs Lead to Fewer Seizures in Treatment-Resistant Epilepsy
MDedge Internal Medicine
Alzheimer’s Research Has an Integrity Problem, Claim Investigators
MDedge Internal Medicine
Medtronic’s Duet EDMS Catheter Tubing Under Class I Recall
MDedge Internal Medicine
Cognitive Deficits After Most Severe COVID Cases Associated With 9-Point IQ Drop
MDedge Internal Medicine