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	�
	5th July�2015 - New research
	
	ARTISTS HAVE A GREATLY 
	REDUCED RISK OF PARKINSON'S DISEASE
	
		
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	Artists have been found to have a greatly reduced risk of Parkinson's 
	Disease that is way below that known for any other occupation. 
These 
	new results are consistent with those famous people known to have had 
	Parkinson's Disease. Of those, the only famous artist was the Spanish artist 
	Salvador Dal� (1904-1989). Even then, his diagnosis is dubious because his 
	near-senile wife had allegedly been giving him a dangerous cocktail of 
	unprescribed medicines that damaged his nervous system. 
	
	
	
	 A 
	reduced risk of Parkinson's Disease was found for men with an artistic 
	occupation late in life that was only 14% of normal. However, being an 
	artist as a first occupation made the likelihood of developing Parkinson's 
	Disease far more likely than that but at 72% still less likely than normal. 
	Conventional occupations showed no increased likelihood of Parkinson's 
	Disease apart from farming, in which Parkinson's Disease was 2.7 times more 
	likely, most probably because of pesticide use. 
	Although artistic occupations late in life are associated with a greatly 
	reduced risk it is probable that because higher dopamine levels are required 
	for visual creativity, that people whose dopamine levels are low, as they 
	are in Parkinson's Disease, would be less inclined to be artistic visually.
A 
	reduced risk of Parkinson's Disease was found for men with an artistic 
	occupation late in life that was only 14% of normal. However, being an 
	artist as a first occupation made the likelihood of developing Parkinson's 
	Disease far more likely than that but at 72% still less likely than normal. 
	Conventional occupations showed no increased likelihood of Parkinson's 
	Disease apart from farming, in which Parkinson's Disease was 2.7 times more 
	likely, most probably because of pesticide use. 
	Although artistic occupations late in life are associated with a greatly 
	reduced risk it is probable that because higher dopamine levels are required 
	for visual creativity, that people whose dopamine levels are low, as they 
	are in Parkinson's Disease, would be less inclined to be artistic visually. 
	
	Reference : Journal of Neurology [2015] Jul 3 [Epub ahead of print] 
	(C.A.Haaxma, G.F. Borm, D.van der Linden, A.C.Kappelle, B.R.Bloem) 
	
	Complete abstract 
	
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