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High blood pressure may lead to brain
injury and to premature brain aging, even among people with only slightly
elevated readings. Brain scientists from the Alzheimer’s Disease Center at the
University of California, Davis, are studying the links between systolic blood pressure (that’s the first
number in a reading, and measures the pressure of the blood on the vessels as
the heart beats) and various indicators of brain injury among middle-aged
adults. In their latest work, published in Lancet Neurology, the
scientists report “a subtle, negative effect” of high systolic blood pressure
on the structural integrity of the brain’s white matter, and a similar negative effect of elevated blood pressure on the
volume of grey matter in the brain.
That means that by age 40, the brain of a person with hypertension or
clinically high blood pressure of 140/90 mm Hg, looks 7.2 years older than the
brain of a person with normal blood pressure, according to indicators of brain
function and anatomy that the researchers measured. And it’s not just those
with clinical hypertension who have to worry; the team saw changes in brain
structure among people with normal blood-pressure readings or with systolic
readings just slightly higher than normal. The higher the systolic blood
pressure, it seems, the greater the signs of brain damage.
These findings are consistent with previous research that links
hypertension to brain damage. But this is the first study to show an
association beginning so early in life. This study finds the same kind of
structural injuries that have been linked to cognitive decline and increased risk of dementia among elderly people, but instead among those in just their 30s and 40s.
“The message here is really clear: People can influence their late-life
brain health by knowing and treating their blood pressure at a young age, when
you wouldn’t necessarily be thinking about it,” said Dr. Charles DeCarli,
senior author on the study and the director of the UC Davis Alzheimer’s Disease
Center. “The people in our study were cognitively normal, so a lack of
[cognitive-decline] symptoms doesn’t mean anything.”
To conduct their study, DeCarli and colleagues looked at blood-pressure
readings and brain scans from 579 people, aged 19 to 63, participating in the Framingham Heart Study. Running since 1948, Framingham is probably the single most important
study ever conducted on heart disease risk factors. Over the years, it has
revealed the role of obesity, high blood pressure, and high cholesterol in
determining heart-disease risk – all things that, today, we take for
granted as common knowledge. Framingham is now helping to reveal the role that
heart health plays in cognitive performance as well.
DeCarli’s research shows that measurable brain injury can occur decades
before clinical signs of dementia appear. And, with ever-stronger evidence for a link between heart health and brain health, the new findings suggest that all adults, not just the
elderly, should be vigilant about managing their blood pressure. Although only
a doctor can diagnose hypertension, it’s worth monitoring your own blood
pressure occasionally, either at drugstores, which offer free checks, or with
an at-home reader. That way, you can compare daily measurements to those taken
at your routine or emergency medical visits.
Hypertension is extremely common. The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and
Blood Institute estimates that two thirds of AMericans over 65 now have high blood pressure. Readings
between 120/80 mm Hg and 139/89 mm Hg are considered signs of
“prehypertension,” with anything above 140/90 mm Hg qualifying as hypertension.
Blood pressure, particularly the systolic reading, tends to rise with age, so
higher mesurements early in life are a potential danger sign, say experts. And
according to this latest research, the harms to your brain may begin well
before your golden years if hypertension isn’t controlled properly. As the
researchers write in their journal article, the evidence of even subtle brain
injury among young middle-aged people “should have a substantial impact on how physicians
regard hypertension diagnosis and treatment [...]. [P]revention of stroke or
cognitive impairment due to hypertensive vascular disease may require treatment
at younger ages than currently envisioned.”
Source: Health Land
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