Starr John M, Deary Ian J, Fox Helen, Whalley Lawrence J
University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Gerontology. 2007;53(6):432-7. doi: 10.1159/000111696. Epub 2007 Nov 28.
The relationship between blood pressure and cognition in old age remains unclear. Some data indicate that elevated blood pressure causes cognitive deficits whilst others show that lower early life mental ability predicts high blood pressure in adulthood. Longitudinal studies in which mental ability earlier in life is known are needed to clarify the relationship.
To measure the effect of blood pressure on cognition in late adulthood after adjusting for early life mental ability.
The sample comprised survivors of the 1947 Scottish Mental Survey who had validated IQ scores at age 11. Six cognitive tests - Mini-Mental State Examination, Raven's Progressive Matrices, Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, Uses of Common Objects Test, Digit Symbol Test and Block Design - were administered at ages 64, 66 and 68 years. Sitting and standing blood pressure was also measured at each wave of follow-up. Mixed general linear models were constructed with each cognitive test treated as a repeated measure of an underlying cognitive trait and with wave of testing also set as a repeated measure. Mental ability at age 11 was entered as a covariate.
504 participants were tested at wave 1 with 368 returning at wave 2 and 300 at wave 3. Age 11 mental ability did not predict any of the blood pressure measures. There were several significant associations between blood pressure variables and cognitive test scores in univariate models. After adjusting for significant effects of wave of testing, type of cognitive test, the interaction between these, age 11 mental ability, age, gender and occupation in a multivariate model, the main effect of BP trait was no longer significant (p = 0.44) nor its effect over time (p = 0.26), though there was a significant interaction between blood pressure trait (BP) and test type with a distinctly negative effect of BP on Auditory Verbal Learning Test (p = 0.007, -0.13 points per mm Hg higher, 95% CI -0.22 to -0.033).
The effects of blood pressure on cognition in old age are finely nuanced. Multivariate repeated measures models reveal a differential effect of blood pressure on verbal recall.
老年期血压与认知之间的关系仍不明确。一些数据表明血压升高会导致认知缺陷,而另一些数据则显示早年较低的智力水平预示着成年期的高血压。需要进行纵向研究,了解早年的智力水平,以阐明这种关系。
在调整早年智力水平后,测量血压对成年晚期认知的影响。
样本包括1947年苏格兰智力调查的幸存者,他们在11岁时的智商分数得到验证。在64、66和68岁时进行了六项认知测试——简易精神状态检查表、瑞文渐进性矩阵测验、雷伊听觉词语学习测验、普通物体用途测验、数字符号测验和积木图案测验。每次随访时还测量了坐位和立位血压。构建混合一般线性模型,将每项认知测试视为潜在认知特征的重复测量,并将测试波次也设为重复测量。将11岁时的智力水平作为协变量纳入。
504名参与者在第1波进行了测试,368名在第2波返回,300名在第3波返回。11岁时的智力水平不能预测任何血压指标。在单变量模型中,血压变量与认知测试分数之间存在若干显著关联。在多变量模型中,在调整了测试波次、认知测试类型、两者之间的交互作用、11岁时的智力水平、年龄、性别和职业的显著影响后,血压特征的主要效应不再显著(p = 0.44),其随时间的效应也不再显著(p = 0.26),尽管血压特征(BP)与测试类型之间存在显著交互作用,血压对听觉词语学习测验有明显的负面影响(p = 0.007,每毫米汞柱升高-0.13分,95%可信区间-0.22至-0.033)。
血压对老年认知的影响细微。多变量重复测量模型揭示了血压对言语回忆的不同影响。