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Stroke. 2006;37:1146
Published online before print April 6, 2006, doi: 10.1161/01.STR.0000217638.48894.bc
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(Stroke. 2006;37:1146.)
© 2006 American Heart Association, Inc.


Editorials

Antihypertensive Therapy and Cognition

More Questions Than Answers

John C.M. Brust, MD

From the Harlem Hospital Center and Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York, NY.

Correspondence to John C.M. Brust, Harlem Hospital Center, 506 Lenox Ave, New York, NY, US 10037-1802. E-mail jcb2@columbia.edu


Key Words: dementia • hypertension


An extract of the first 250 words of the full text is provided, because this article has no abstract.
 

See related article, pages 1165–1170

An article in this issue of Stroke by Peila et al,1 that duration of antihypertensive therapy seems to correlate with a reduced risk for both dementia and nondementing cognitive decline in elderly men, revisits a number of tantalizing questions, some of which are specifically mentioned by the authors and some not. What, pathophysiologically, is subsumed under the term "vascular dementia"? Can hypertension impair cognition by causing small vessel disease and widespread microinfarction in the absence of clinical stroke? Is such a process reflected in cerebral white matter hyperintensities on MRI? How specific are such abnormal signals for microvascular disease, and to what degree do they correlate with cognitive decline? Can hypertension damage neurons independently of vasculopathy? Does vasculopathy contribute to Alzheimer disease? Is hypertension a risk factor for Alzheimer disease or does it simply add to the cognitive decline by superimposing microvascular lesions? Might certain antihypertensive drugs protect against dementia by mechanisms other than blood pressure–lowering?

Peila et al’s1 848 subjects, from the Honolulu-Heart Program/Honolulu-Asia Aging Study, had a mean age of 77 years and had been hypertensive from midlife. Some had never been treated; others had been treated, variably, from <5 years to >12 years. Dementia-free at baseline cognitive assessment, they were periodically reassessed for up to 7 years. Four hundred and forty-six normotensives served as controls. During follow-up 108 subjects became demented, 65 with Alzheimer disease, 19 with vascular dementia, and 24 with dementia from other causes.

For each year of antihypertensive . . . [Full Text of this Article]


Related Article:

Reducing the Risk of Dementia: Efficacy of Long-Term Treatment of Hypertension
Rita Peila, Lon R. White, Kamal Masaki, Helen Petrovitch, and Lenore J. Launer
Stroke 2006 37: 1165-1170. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]



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Can Treating Hypertension Lower the Risk for Dementia?
Journal Watch Cardiology, May 18, 2006; 2006(518): 5 - 5.
[Full Text]