From the Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center (Lamar, Fleischman, Leurgans, Aggarwal, Yu, Kim, Poole, Han, Arfanakis, Barnes); Departments of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (Lamar, Fleischman, Barnes), Neurological Sciences (Fleischman, Leurgans, Aggarwal, Yu, Kim, Barnes), and Orthopedic Surgery (Poole), Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois; Departments of Family Medicine and Neurology, Keck School of Medicine (Han), and Department of Psychology (Han), and School of Gerontology (Han), University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California; Department of Biomedical Engineering (Arfanakis), Illinois Institute of Technology; and Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine (Arfanakis), Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois.
Psychosom Med. 2022 May 1;84(4):437-445. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000001059. Epub 2022 Jan 22.
Elevations in blood pressure (BP) and associated white matter hyperintensities (WMHs) are chronic comorbid conditions among older Black adults. We investigated whether WMHs modify the association between late-life BP and cognition within older Black adults.
A total of 167 Black adults (age, ~75 years; without dementia at baseline) participating in neuroimaging studies at the Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center were evaluated for BP markers of cardiovascular health, including systolic BP, diastolic BP, pulse pressure, mean arterial pressure (MAP), and hypertension, and were assessed for global and domain-specific cognition at baseline and annually for up to 8 years. WMHs adjusted for intracranial volume were quantified at baseline.
Models adjusted for relevant confounders and the interaction of these variables with time revealed differential associations between BP markers and baseline cognition; however, only elevated diastolic BP predicted faster cognitive, that is, episodic memory, decline (estimate = -0.002, standard error = 0.0009, p = .002). Although WMH burden did not modify the association between diastolic BP and episodic memory decline, it did interact with diastolic BP to lower episodic memory at baseline (estimate = -0.051, standard error = 0.012, p = .0001); that is, greater WMHs combined with higher diastolic BP resulted in the lowest baseline episodic memory scores. A similar profile was noted for WMHs, MAP, and baseline episodic memory. Hypertension was neither associated with cognition nor modified by WMH burden after multiple comparisons correction.
Late-life diastolic BP was associated with faster rates of episodic memory decline in older Black adults; together with higher WMH burden, it (and MAP) lowered the point at which individuals begin their course of decline toward pathological aging.
血压(BP)升高和相关的脑白质高信号(WMHs)是老年黑人中常见的慢性共病。我们研究了 WMHs 是否改变了老年黑人中晚年 BP 与认知之间的关联。
共有 167 名黑人成年人(年龄约 75 岁;基线时无痴呆)参加了拉什阿尔茨海默病中心的神经影像学研究,评估了心血管健康的 BP 标志物,包括收缩压、舒张压、脉压、平均动脉压(MAP)和高血压,并在基线和每年进行全球和特定领域认知评估,最长可达 8 年。在基线时调整了颅内体积的 WMHs 进行了量化。
调整了相关混杂因素和这些变量与时间的相互作用的模型揭示了 BP 标志物与基线认知之间的差异关联;然而,只有升高的舒张压预测了更快的认知,即情景记忆下降(估计值=-0.002,标准误差=0.0009,p=0.002)。虽然 WMH 负担并没有改变舒张压与情景记忆下降之间的关联,但它确实与舒张压相互作用,降低了基线时的情景记忆(估计值=-0.051,标准误差=0.012,p=0.0001);也就是说,较高的 WMHs 加上较高的舒张压导致了最低的基线情景记忆评分。WMHs、MAP 和基线情景记忆之间也存在类似的情况。经过多次比较校正后,高血压与认知无关,也不受 WMH 负担的影响。
晚年舒张压与老年黑人更快的情景记忆下降率相关;与较高的 WMH 负担一起,它(和 MAP)降低了个体开始向病理性衰老下降的起点。