Department of Internal Medicine I, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Bavaria, Germany.
Women's Health Initiative Coordinating Center, Seattle, Washington.
Am J Cardiol. 2020 Aug 15;129:102-108. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2020.05.030. Epub 2020 May 26.
Evidence on the relations between heart rate, brain morphology, and cognition is limited. We examined the associations of resting heart rate (RHR), visit-to-visit heart rate variation (VVHRV), brain volumes and cognitive impairment. The study sample consisted of postmenopausal women enrolled in the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study and its ancillary MRI sub-studies (WHIMS-MRI 1 and WHIMS-MRI 2) without a history of cardiovascular disease, including 493 with one and 299 women with 2 brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. HR readings were acquired annually starting from baseline visit (1996-1998). RHR was calculated as the mean and VVHRV as standard deviation of all available HR readings. Brain MRI scans were performed between 2005 and 2006 (WHIMS-MRI 1), and approximately 5 years later (WHIMS-MRI 2). Cognitive impairment was defined as incident mild cognitive impairment or probable dementia until December 30, 2017. An elevated RHR was associated with greater brain lesion volumes at the first MRI exam (7.86 cm3 [6.48, 9.24] vs 4.78 cm3 [3.39, 6.17], p-value <0.0001) and with significant increases in lesion volumes between brain MRI exams (6.20 cm3 [4.81, 7.59] vs 4.28 cm3 [2.84, 5.73], p-value = 0.0168). Larger ischemic lesion volumes were associated with a higher risk for cognitive impairment (Hazard Ratio [95% confidence interval], 2.02 [1.18, 3.47], p-value = 0.0109). Neither RHR nor VVHRV were related to cognitive impairment. In sensitivity analyses, we additionally included women with a history of cardiovascular disease to the study sample. The main results were consistent to those without a history of cardiovascular disease. In conclusion, these findings show an association between elevated RHR and ischemic brain lesions, probably due to underlying subclinical disease processes.
关于心率、大脑形态和认知之间关系的证据有限。我们研究了静息心率(RHR)、心率变异性(VVHRV)、脑容量与认知障碍的相关性。该研究样本包括参加妇女健康倡议记忆研究及其辅助磁共振成像子研究(WHIMS-MRI 1 和 WHIMS-MRI 2)的绝经后妇女,且无心血管疾病史,其中 493 名女性有 1 次磁共振成像扫描,299 名女性有 2 次磁共振成像扫描。HR 读数从基线访视(1996-1998 年)开始每年采集一次。RHR 计算为所有可用 HR 读数的平均值,VVHRV 计算为标准差。脑 MRI 扫描于 2005 年至 2006 年(WHIMS-MRI 1)进行,大约 5 年后(WHIMS-MRI 2)进行。认知障碍定义为直至 2017 年 12 月 30 日发生的轻度认知障碍或可能的痴呆。第一次 MRI 检查时,较高的 RHR 与较大的脑损伤体积相关(7.86 cm3[6.48,9.24]与 4.78 cm3[3.39,6.17],p 值<0.0001),并且两次 MRI 检查之间的脑损伤体积显著增加(6.20 cm3[4.81,7.59]与 4.28 cm3[2.84,5.73],p 值=0.0168)。较大的缺血性损伤体积与认知障碍风险升高相关(风险比[95%置信区间],2.02[1.18,3.47],p 值=0.0109)。RHR 和 VVHRV 均与认知障碍无关。在敏感性分析中,我们还将有心血管疾病史的女性纳入研究样本。主要结果与无心血管疾病史的女性一致。总之,这些发现表明较高的 RHR 与缺血性脑损伤之间存在关联,这可能是由于潜在的亚临床疾病过程所致。