Jiang Xin, Cai Yurun, Zhao Yue, Gao Xia, Peng Dan, Zhang Hui, Deng Wuhong, Fu Wen, Qin Na, Chang Ruizhen, Manor Brad, Zhou Junhong
Department of Geriatrics, Shenzhen People's Hospital, Shenzhen, China.
The Second Clinical Medical College, Jinan University, Shenzhen, China.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2021 Apr 29;13:640942. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.640942. eCollection 2021.
Older adults with hypertension often had diminished walking performance. The underlying mechanism through which hypertension affects walking performance, however, has not been fully understood. We here measured the complexity of the continuous systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure fluctuation, grade of white matter lesions (WMLs), and cognitive function and used structural equation modeling (SEM) to examine the interrelationships between hypertension, BP complexity, WMLs, cognitive function, and walking speed in single- and dual-task conditions. A total of 152 older adults with age > 60 years (90 hypertensive and 62 normotensive participants) completed one MRI scan of brain structure, a finger BP assessment of at least 10 min, Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) to assess cognitive function, and 10-meter walking tests in single (i.e., normal walking) and dual tasks (i.e., walking while performing a serial subtraction of three from a random three-digit number). The grade of WMLs was assessed using the total score of Fazekas scale; the complexity of SBP and DBP was measured using multiscale entropy (MSE), and the walking performance was assessed by walking speed in single- and dual-task conditions. As compared to normotensives, hypertensive older adults had significantly slower walking speed, lower complexity of SBP and DBP, greater grade of WMLs, and poorer cognitive function ( < 0.03). Those with lower BP complexity (β > 0.31, < 0.003), greater WML grade (β < -0.39, < 0.0002), and/or poorer cognitive function (β < -0.39, < 0.0001) had slower walking speed in single- and/or dual-task conditions. The SEM model demonstrated significant total effects of hypertension on walking speed, and such effects were mediated by BP complexity only, or BP complexity, WML grade, and cognitive function together. This study demonstrates the cross-sectional association between the complexity of continuous beat-to-beat BP fluctuation, WML grade, cognitive function, and walking speed in hypertensive and normotensive older adults, revealing a potential mechanism that hypertension may affect walking performance in older adults through diminished BP complexity, increased WML grade, and decreased cognitive function, and BP complexity is an important factor for such effects. Future longitudinal studies are warranted to confirm the findings in this study.
患有高血压的老年人通常行走能力会下降。然而,高血压影响行走能力的潜在机制尚未完全明确。我们在此测量了连续收缩压(SBP)和舒张压(DBP)波动的复杂性、白质病变(WMLs)等级以及认知功能,并使用结构方程模型(SEM)来研究在单任务和双任务条件下高血压、血压复杂性、WMLs、认知功能和步行速度之间的相互关系。共有152名年龄大于60岁的老年人(90名高血压患者和62名血压正常的参与者)完成了一次脑结构MRI扫描、至少10分钟的手指血压评估、用于评估认知功能的简易精神状态检查表(MMSE)以及单任务(即正常行走)和双任务(即边行走边从一个随机三位数中依次减去3)下的10米步行测试。使用Fazekas量表总分评估WMLs等级;使用多尺度熵(MSE)测量SBP和DBP的复杂性,通过单任务和双任务条件下的步行速度评估行走能力。与血压正常者相比,高血压老年人的步行速度显著更慢、SBP和DBP的复杂性更低、WMLs等级更高且认知功能更差(<0.03)。血压复杂性较低(β>0.31,<0.003)、WML等级较高(β<-0.39,<0.0002)和/或认知功能较差(β<-0.39,<0.0001)的人在单任务和/或双任务条件下的步行速度较慢。SEM模型显示高血压对步行速度有显著的总体影响,且这种影响仅由血压复杂性介导,或由血压复杂性、WML等级和认知功能共同介导。本研究表明了高血压和血压正常的老年人中逐搏连续血压波动的复杂性、WML等级、认知功能和步行速度之间的横断面关联,揭示了一种潜在机制,即高血压可能通过降低血压复杂性、增加WML等级和降低认知功能来影响老年人的行走能力,且血压复杂性是产生这种影响的一个重要因素。未来有必要进行纵向研究以证实本研究的结果。