Extreme heat is quietly rewriting the way our brains function

As the planet heats up, scientists are uncovering disturbing links between rising temperatures and how our brains behave, from seizures to stroke and sleep loss.

Theres Lüthi reports for the BBC.


In short:

  • Neurologists are warning that heatwaves worsen conditions like epilepsy, dementia, and stroke, especially in older people and those in low-income communities, and that even people without pre-existing conditions may be affected as the climate crisis deepens.
  • Kids like Jake, who have neurological conditions such as Dravet Syndrome, are experiencing more frequent and dangerous seizures as summers grow hotter.
  • Researchers also warn that heat is warping our sleep, boosting irritability and depression, and weakening the brain's defenses, potentially letting viruses and toxins through and raising the long-term risk for cognitive and neurodegenerative disorders.

Key quote:

“What we're seeing today in people with neurological disorders could become relevant for people without neurological disorders as climate change progresses.”

— Sanjay Sisodiya, professor of neurology at University College London

Why this matters:

A hotter world is messing with how humans think, sleep, and function. The impacts of extreme heat on brain health could accelerate mental health crises, neurological disorders, and deepen health inequities across the globe. People are already feeling it in their sleep, or lack of it—restlessness, irritability, a creeping sense of malaise. And while headlines often focus on floods, fires, and heat domes, there’s an equally urgent threat unfolding quietly in the dark: the destabilization of humans' inner climate control system.

Read more:

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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