Uncontrolled high
blood pressure means more cognitive problems in old age
Newswise — People with high
blood pressure and their doctors have a new reason to work
at controlling this common but high-risk condition: As
patients get older, they might otherwise have
worse-than-normal problems with short-term memory and verbal
ability. New research shows that uncontrolled hypertension
puts people at higher risk for sharper drops in these
cognitive functions than does blood pressure that’s normal
due to diet, exercise and/or medication. The study appears
in the current issue of Neuropsychology, which is published
by the American Psychological Association (APA).
Because blood pressure
typically increases with age, hypertension affects 60
percent of adults age 60 and older. However, this “silent
killer” often goes undetected or inadequately treated,
leaving nearly 40 percent of older hypertensive people with
continued high readings -- even with treatment. As a result,
the findings suggest that a substantial number of older
people with uncontrolled hypertension will experience
significant cognitive declines, especially because with age,
hypertension becomes more common and harder to control.
Researchers at the
Veterans Affairs (VA) Boston Healthcare System, Harvard
Medical School and the Boston University School of Public
Health looked at a subset of men in the VA Normative Aging
Study, a longitudinal study that started in 1963 and added
neuropsychological tests in 1993. In this smaller
cross-sectional study, 357 men from the larger sample
averaged 67 years of age, lived in the community, didn’t
have dementia or other serious medical problems, and showed
stable blood pressure over a three-year interval.
Hypertension was defined as measuring 140/90 and higher.
Co-authors Christopher
Brady, PhD, Avron Spiro III, PhD, and J. Michael Gaziano,
MD, MPH, found that the older the men, the predictably lower
their overall neuropsychological performance. However, older
men in the sample with uncontrolled hypertension did
significantly worse on specific tests of verbal fluency
(generating words in a given category) and immediate recall
of a word list (short-term memory).
The uncontrolled
hypertensives’ decrements on fluency were 2.4 times as great
as for those with normal pressure; their decrement with
immediate recall was 1.3 times as great. That means by the
age of 80, men with uncontrolled hypertension could generate
seven fewer words in a given category, and recall about one
and a half fewer words on average, than the other
80-year-old men in the study.
“The findings suggest that
uncontrolled hypertension produces specific cognitive
deficits beyond those attributable to age alone,” the
researchers report.
They also note that their findings are consistent with other
studies that suggest that anti-hypertensive drugs do not
hurt cognition, given that the men with controlled
hypertension who used them in this study did as well as men
who had naturally normal blood pressure. The researchers
speculate that high blood pressure somehow exacerbates the
normal effects of age on the frontal lobes, making it even
harder to quickly retrieve information such as words.
The authors raise the
possibility that the actual proportion of cognitive problems
among older people with uncontrolled hypertension in the
general population may actually be larger than seen in the
study, because this sample used healthy men with no other
health problems. Uncontrolled hypertension also is known to
raise the risk of vascular dementia, the second most common
form of serious cognitive impairment after Alzheimer’s
disease.
Article: Christopher B.
Brady, PhD, Veterans Affairs Boston Healthcare System and
Harvard Medical School; Avron Spiro III, PhD, Veterans
Affairs Boston Healthcare System and Boston University
School of Public Health; J. Michael Gaziano, MD, MPH,
Veterans Affairs Boston Healthcare System and Harvard
Medical School; “Effects of Age and Hypertension Status on
Cognition: The Veterans Affairs Normative Aging Study;”
Neuropsychology, Vol. 19, No. 6.
(Full text of the article
is available from the APA Public Affairs Office and at
http://www.apa.org/journals/releases/neu196770.pdf
)
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