Ma Yuan, Zhang Yiwen, Hamaya Rikuta, Westerhof Berend E, Shaltout Hossam A, Kavousi Maryam, Mattace-Raso Francesco, Hofman Albert, Wolters Frank J, Lipsitz Lewis A, Ikram M Arfan
Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA (Y.M., Y.Z., R.H., A.H.).
Division of Preventive Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA (R.H.).
Hypertension. 2025 Feb;82(2):347-356. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.124.24001. Epub 2024 Dec 13.
Increased blood pressure (BP) variability is linked to dementia risk, but the relationship between baroreflex sensitivity (BRS), a fundamental mechanism for maintaining stable BP, and dementia risk is undetermined.
We tested the hypothesis that impaired BRS is associated with increased dementia risk in 1819 older adults (63% women; age, 71.0±6.3 years) from the community-based Rotterdam Study. Cardiac BRS was determined from a 5-minute beat-to-beat BP recording at supine rest between 1997 and 1999. Cardiac BRS measures the correlation between changes in consecutive beat-to-beat systolic BP and subsequent responses in heartbeat intervals, with a higher value indicating better BRS. The primary outcome was incident dementia ascertained from baseline through January 1, 2020; the secondary outcome was all-cause mortality.
During a median follow-up of 14.8 years, 421 participants developed dementia. The association of cardiac BRS with dementia risk differed by antihypertensive medication use (=0.03) and was only observed in participants not taking antihypertensives. Specifically, in those not taking antihypertensive medication, reduced BRS was associated with a higher risk of dementia (adjusted hazard ratio comparing bottom versus top quintiles, 1.60 [95% CI, 1.07-2.40]; =0.02). Reduced BRS was also associated with an increased risk of death (corresponding hazard ratio, 1.76 [95% CI, 1.32-2.35]). The association remained after adjusting for average BP and BP variability.
Impaired BRS partly explains hypertension-related brain damage and excessive dementia risk beyond conventional BP measures, making it a potential novel biomarker for the early detection and prevention of dementia.
血压(BP)变异性增加与痴呆风险相关,但压力反射敏感性(BRS)作为维持血压稳定的基本机制与痴呆风险之间的关系尚未确定。
我们在基于社区的鹿特丹研究中的1819名老年人(63%为女性;年龄71.0±6.3岁)中检验了BRS受损与痴呆风险增加相关的假设。1997年至1999年期间,通过仰卧位休息时5分钟的逐搏血压记录来确定心脏BRS。心脏BRS测量连续逐搏收缩压变化与随后心跳间期反应之间的相关性,值越高表明BRS越好。主要结局是从基线到2020年1月1日确定的新发痴呆;次要结局是全因死亡率。
在中位随访14.8年期间,421名参与者患上痴呆。心脏BRS与痴呆风险的关联因使用抗高血压药物而异(P=0.03),且仅在未服用抗高血压药物的参与者中观察到。具体而言,在未服用抗高血压药物的人群中,BRS降低与痴呆风险较高相关(比较最低与最高五分位数的调整后风险比,1.60[95%CI,1.07 - 2.40];P=0.02)。BRS降低还与死亡风险增加相关(相应风险比,1.76[95%CI,1.32 - 2.35])。在调整平均血压和血压变异性后,该关联仍然存在。
BRS受损部分解释了高血压相关的脑损伤以及超出传统血压测量指标的过度痴呆风险,使其成为早期检测和预防痴呆的潜在新型生物标志物。