Moneycontrol
HomeWorldHow a childhood virus may raise dementia risk

How a childhood virus may raise dementia risk

A new study shows shingles reactivation could harm the brain, and vaccinatioappears to lower long-term risk.

November 10, 2025 / 11:55 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
How a childhood virus may raise dementia risk

A major new analysis involving more than 100 million U.S. medical records is reshaping how scientists think about the link between shingles and dementia. The study, published in Nature Medicine, found that people who experienced multiple shingles outbreaks had a measurably higher risk of developing dementia in the years that followed. At the same time, those who received shingles vaccines showed a significantly lower dementia risk, reinforcing growing evidence that controlling varicella-zoster virus activity may protect the brain, the Washington Post reported.

Why the chickenpox virus is involved at all

Story continues below Advertisement

The varicella-zoster virus causes chickenpox in childhood, then goes dormant inside the nervous system for decades. As people age, the virus can reactivate. Sometimes the immune system suppresses it without symptoms. At other times it re-emerges fully as shingles, with painful blisters and nerve inflammation. Researchers have long suspected that repeated or chronic reactivation may damage structures involved in memory and cognition. This study adds weight to that theory by showing a clear risk pattern among people who had more than one outbreak.

What the vaccines appear to be doing