If the cardiologist's warnings do not scare you, consider
this: Controlling blood pressure just might be the best
protection yet known against dementia.
In a flurry of new research, scientists scanned people's
brains to show hypertension fuels a kind of scarring linked
to later development of Alzheimer's disease and other
dementias.
Those scars can start building up in middle age, decades
before memory problems will appear.
The evidence is strong enough that the National Institutes of
Health soon will begin enrolling thousands of hypertension
sufferers in a major study to see if aggressive treatment -
pushing blood pressure lower than currently recommended -
better protects not just their hearts but their brains.
"If you look ... for things that we can prevent that lead to
cognitive decline in the elderly, hypertension is at the top
of the list," Dr. Walter Koroshetz, deputy director of NIH's
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, told
The Associated Press.
Age is the biggest risk factor for Alzheimer's disease and
other forms of dementia that affect about one in eight people
65 or older. Scientists have long noticed that some of the
same triggers for heart disease - high blood pressure,
obesity, diabetes - seem to increase the risk of dementia,
too. But for years, they thought that link was with "vascular
dementia," memory problems usually linked to small strokes,
and not the scarier classic Alzheimer's disease.
Now those lines are blurring as specialists realise that many
if not most patients have a mix of the two dementias.
Somehow, factors like hypertension - blood pressure readings
of 140 over 90 or higher - that weaken arteries also seem to
spur Alzheimer's disease-like processes. One suspect:
Scarring known as white matter lesions. White matter acts as
the brain's telephone network, a system of axons, or nerve
fibers, that allow brain cells to communicate with each
other.
Even slightly elevated blood pressure can damage the tiny
blood vessels that nourish white matter, interrupting those
signals. Among the strongest new studies: -MRI scans showed
women 65 and older with high blood pressure had significantly
more white matter lesions in their brains eight years later.
The study included 1,403 women who were enrolled in a memory
subset of the landmark Women's Health Initiative that tracked
postmenopausal health. The worse their blood pressure, the
higher volume of white matter damage, says the study
published online last month in the Journal of Clinical
Hypertension.
"This is a silent disease in the brain," says lead researcher
Dr. Lewis Kuller of the University of Pittsburgh. "It's
evolving over time and it leads to very bad outcomes."
The journal Stroke just published similar evidence from a
Johns Hopkins University-led study that tracked 983 people
for more than 15 years, starting in middle age. The longer
people spent with uncontrolled high blood pressure, the more
white matter damage they accumulated. The researchers could
see a change with each 20-point jump in too-high systolic
pressure, the top number in a blood-pressure reading.
Clearly, hypertension alone doesn't doom someone to later
dementia. Far more people, nearly one in three US adults,
have hypertension. And there are plenty of other reasons to
lower blood pressure: Hypertension is a leading cause of
heart attacks, strokes and kidney failure. But while some
studies have found hypertension treatment lowered the
dementia risk, others haven't.
Enter the NIH's SPRINT study, which in a few months is to
begin enrolling 7,500 hypertension patients age 55 and older
around the country. The test: Whether aggressive treatment to
lower systolic blood pressure below 120 - what's considered
normal - will prove healthier than today's guidelines that
urge getting it below 140, or 130 for diabetics.
The main focus is on heart and kidney health. But all
participants will be screened for dementia, and a subset will
undergo repeated cognitive testing and MRI scans to tell if
lowering blood pressure also protects against a slide toward
dementia.
Another question: If older patients can tolerate bigger than
usual blood pressure drops without side effects, such as
falls. With dementia rising fast as the population grays,
even a small effect from better blood pressure control could
have a big public health impact, says Dr. William Thies of
the Alzheimer's Association.
Other dementia-preventing efforts, such as targeting the
sticky amyloid plaques in Alzheimer's patients brains,
haven't panned out so far - while hypertension control has
little downside, notes Pittsburgh's Kuller.
"Until I can tell you how to get rid of amyloid in your
brain, take care of the blood pressure."
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