Millions more Brits could receive weight loss vaccines on NHS after green light – are you eligible?

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It’s impossible to escape the hype surrounding weight loss scams.

More recently, scientists said the drugs could be the hope of the future against cancer, after initial studies suggested they could reduce the risk of tumors, for example.

Here are all the other benefits scientists say vaccines can have:

It could reduce the risk of cancer…

Fat injections could be cancer’s hope of the future, after early studies found they reduce the risk of tumor growth.

The world’s top experts are gearing up for a boom in research to discover whether miracle drugs can prevent the most feared disease.

Research by Case Western Reserve University in Ohio found that obese people were 19% less likely to get cancer if they used the injections than people who didn’t.

It can cure snoring…

Researchers say fat injections can silence snoring by treating an underlying health condition called sleep apnea.

It happens when your breathing stops and starts while you sleep, causing people to choke, snore and wake up spitting up during the night.

Around 10 million Brits are thought to have it, according to the Confidence in Sleep Apnea.

Being overweight or obese can increase a person’s risk of developing the disease by narrowing the airways.

After conducting two studies in adults with obesity and sleep apnea, drugmaker Eli Lilly claimed that its Mounjaro fat injection could reduce the number of times people had breathing problems at night.

After 52 weeks, those who received injections of 10 to 15 mg of Mounjaro, on average, had almost 30 fewer dangerous respiratory episodes per hour, representing a 55% drop.

On the other hand, participants taking a placebo medication had only 4.8 fewer events, a 5% reduction.

It can ward off Alzheimer’s.

Medications like Ozempic and Wegovy can affect cognitive disorders and even prevent Alzheimer’s disease.

The thought arises from a Danish study who followed people with type 2 diabetes for five years.

Scientists found that those who took weight loss vaccines were less likely to develop dementia compared to those who did not take the drug.

However, it is already known that obesity – which is associated with type 2 diabetes – increases the risk of Alzheimer’s, according to the Alzheimer’s Society.

This suggests that it may be just the weight loss effects that provide benefits against the disease.

This can increase your fertility…

Some women have become pregnant unexpectedly after taking semaglutide injections.

This has led some doctors in the US to prescribe the drug to treat polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a leading cause of infertility in women.

Many people with this disease are overweight and have higher levels of testosterone, which is generally considered a “male hormone.”

Researchers consider that weight loss medications can help regulate hormones in people with PCOS and thus reduce symptoms and complications.

It can help people give up drugs, smoking or drinking…

It turns out that weight-loss injections can stop drug cravings in the same way they stop food cravings.

Vaccines are known to promote feelings of satiety and, it appears, decrease the reward associated not only with food but also with drugs.

A Penn University study found that liraglutide was as effective as fifteen days of rehabilitation for people addicted to painkillers.

Tests carried out on 20 people recovering from opioid addiction revealed that patients who took the injections once a day rated desire 40% lower than those in rehabilitation.

While some patients did not feel any cravings.

It may reduce your chance of a heart attack or stroke…

The thin injection may also reduce the risk of heart attack, according to the researchers.

Being a healthy weight can reduce your risk of developing heart and circulatory diseases, such as stroke and vascular dementia.

This is because carrying excess weight can lead to the accumulation of fatty substances in the arteries, warns the British Heart Foundation (BHF).

If an artery’s job is to carry blood to the heart and it becomes blocked, it can trigger a heart attack.

And if the same thing happens in an artery that brings blood to the brain, it can cause a stroke.

So it’s perhaps not surprising that injections that can help you lose weight can also reduce your risk of cardiovascular problems.

It may be able to slow down Parkinson’s…

For decades, there has been little progress in the battle against Parkinson’s.

But French researchers reported the first glimmer of hope — a modest slowing of the disease in a yearlong study among people who used the vaccines for weight loss.

Parkinson’s is a devastating nervous system disorder that affects 10 million people worldwide, with no current cure.

Symptoms include tremors, sluggishness and stiffness, and difficulty balancing.

This can cause difficulty walking, talking and swallowing. Many patients develop dementia.

O paperpublished in The New England Journal of Medicine, involved 156 people with early-stage Parkinson’s disease who were randomly assigned to take the drug – lixisenatide – or a placebo and followed for a year.

During this time, Parkinson’s symptoms such as tremor, stiffness, sluggishness and balance worsened in those taking the placebo but not in those taking the drug.

The effect was “modest”, according to the researchers.



This story originally appeared on The-sun.com read the full story

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