Having high blood pressure in your 30s is associated with worse brain
health around age 75, especially for men, according to a new UC Davis study.
The
research, published this week in JAMA Network Open,
compared magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans of older adults who had
high blood pressure between the ages of 30 to 40 with older adults who had
normal blood pressure.
The researchers found that the high blood pressure group had significantly
lower regional brain volumes and worse white matter integrity. Both factors are
associated with dementia.
The research also showed that the negative brain changes in some regions —
such as decreased grey matter volume and frontal cortex volume — were stronger
in men. They note the differences may be related to the protective benefits of
estrogen before menopause.
“Treatment for
dementia is extremely limited, so identifying modifiable risk and protective
factors over the life course is key to reducing disease burden,” said first
author Kristen M. George, an assistant professor in
the Department of Public Health Sciences.
“High blood pressure is an incredibly common and treatable risk factor associated with dementia. This study indicates hypertension status in early adulthood is important for brain health decades later,” George said.
High blood pressure prevalent in U.S.
High blood pressure, also known as hypertension, is
blood pressure that is higher than normal. A normal blood pressure level is
less than 130/80 mmHg. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates
that 47% of adults in the United States have
hypertension.
The rate of high blood pressure varies by sex and race. About 50% of men have high blood pressure compared to 44% of women. The rate of hypertension is about 56% in Black adults, 48% in white adults, 46% in Asian adults and 39% in Hispanic adults. African Americans ages 35-64 years are 50% more likely to have high blood pressure than whites.
Methods
The
researchers looked at data from 427 participants from the Kaiser Healthy Aging
and Diverse Life Experiences (KHANDLE) study and the Study of Healthy
Aging in African Americans (STAR). This provided them with health data from 1964 to
1985 for a diverse cohort of older Asian, Black, Latino and white adults.
They obtained two blood pressure readings from when the participants were
between the ages of 30 to 40. This allowed them to determine if they had been
hypertensive, transitioning to hypertensive or had normal blood pressure in
young adulthood.
MRI scans of the participants conducted between 2017 and 2022 allowed them
to look for late-life neuroimaging biomarkers of neurodegeneration and white
matter integrity.
A significant reduction in cerebral gray matter volume is seen in both men and women with hypertension but is stronger in men.
Results
Compared to participants with normal blood pressure, the brain scans of
those transitioning to high blood pressure or with high blood pressure showed
lower cerebral gray matter volume, frontal cortex volume and fractional
anisotropy (a measure of brain connectivity). The scores for men with high
blood pressure were lower than those for women.
The study joins a growing body of evidence that cardiovascular risk factors
in young adulthood are detrimental to late-life brain health.
The researchers note that due to the sample size, they could not examine
racial and ethnic differences and recommended interpreting results regarding
sex differences with caution. They also note that the MRI data was only
available from one time-point late in life. This can only determine physical
properties like volumetric differences, not specific evidence of
neurodegeneration over time.
“This study
truly demonstrates the importance of early life risk factors and that to age
well, you need to take care of yourself throughout life — heart health is brain
health,” said Rachel Whitmer, senior
author of the study. Whitmer is a professor in the departments of Public Health Sciences and Neurology and chief of the Division of
Epidemiology. She’s also the associate director of the UC Davis Alzheimer’s
Disease Center.
“We are excited to be able to continue following these participants and to uncover more about what one can do in early life to set yourself up for healthy brain aging in late life,” Whitmer said.
Journal article: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2802984
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