Molshatzki Noa, Weinstein Galit, Streifler Jonathan Y, Goldbourt Uri, Tanne David
Sagol Neuroscience Center, Chaim Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer, Israel.
Department of Neurology, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Mar 20;10(3):e0120862. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0120862. eCollection 2015.
High serum uric acid (UA) levels are associated with numerous vascular risk factors, and vascular disease, that predispose patients to cognitive impairment, yet UA is also a major natural antioxidant and higher levels have been linked to slower progression of several neurodegenerative disease. In-order to test the association between UA and subsequent cognitive performance among patients that carry a high vascular burden, UA levels were determined by calorimetric enzymatic tests in a sub-cohort of patients with chronic cardiovascular disease who previously participating in a secondary prevention trial. After an average of 9.8±1.7 years, we assessed cognitive performance (Neurotrax Computerized Cognitive Battery) as well as cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) and common carotid intima-media thickness (IMT). Among 446 men (mean age 62.3±6.4 yrs) mean UA levels were 5.8±1.1 mg/dL. Adjusted linear regression models revealed that low UA levels (bottom quintile) were associated with poorer cognitive performance. Adjusted differences between the bottom quintile and grouped top UA quintiles were (B coefficient±SE) -4.23±1.28 for global cognitive scores (p = 0.001), -4.69±1.81 for memory scores (p = 0.010), -3.32±1.43 for executive scores (p = 0.020) and -3.43±1.97 for visual spatial scores (p = 0.082). Significant difference was also found for attention scores (p = 0.015). Additional adjustment for impaired CVR and high common carotid IMT slightly attenuated the relationship. Stronger UA effect on cognitive performance was found for older (age>65) patients with significant age interaction for global cognitive score (p = 0.016) and for executive (p = 0.018) and attention domains (p<0.001). In conclusion, we demonstrate that low UA levels in patients with preexisting cardiovascular disease are associated with poorer cognitive function a decade later. These findings lend support to the hypothesis that oxidative stress may be involved in the pathogenesis of age-associated cognitive impairment.
高血清尿酸(UA)水平与众多血管危险因素及血管疾病相关,这些因素使患者易患认知障碍,然而尿酸也是一种主要的天然抗氧化剂,较高水平的尿酸与几种神经退行性疾病的进展较慢有关。为了检验在血管负担较重的患者中尿酸水平与随后认知表现之间的关联,在一个曾参与二级预防试验的慢性心血管疾病患者亚组中,通过比色酶法测定尿酸水平。平均9.8±1.7年后,我们评估了认知表现(Neurotrax计算机化认知测试组合)以及脑血管反应性(CVR)和颈总动脉内膜中层厚度(IMT)。在446名男性(平均年龄62.3±6.4岁)中,平均尿酸水平为5.8±1.1mg/dL。调整后的线性回归模型显示,低尿酸水平(最低五分位数)与较差的认知表现相关。最低五分位数与分组后的最高尿酸五分位数之间的调整差异为:总体认知得分(B系数±标准误)为-4.23±1.28(p = 0.001),记忆得分-4.69±1.81(p = 0.010),执行功能得分-3.32±1.43(p = 0.020),视觉空间得分-3.43±1.97(p = 0.082)。注意力得分也存在显著差异(p = 0.015)。对CVR受损和颈总动脉IMT较高进行额外调整后,这种关系略有减弱。在年龄较大(年龄>65岁)的患者中,尿酸对认知表现的影响更强,总体认知得分(p = 0.016)、执行功能(p = 0.018)和注意力领域(p<0.001)存在显著的年龄交互作用。总之,我们证明,已有心血管疾病患者的低尿酸水平与十年后的较差认知功能相关。这些发现支持了氧化应激可能参与与年龄相关的认知障碍发病机制的假说。