共 62 条
Interactive effects of age and hypertension on volumes of brain structures
被引:152
作者:
Strassburger, TL
[1
]
Lee, HC
[1
]
Daly, EM
[1
]
Szczepanik, J
[1
]
Krasuski, JS
[1
]
Mentis, MJ
[1
]
Salerno, JA
[1
]
DeCarli, C
[1
]
Schapiro, MB
[1
]
Alexander, GE
[1
]
机构:
[1] NIA, NEUROSCI LAB, NIH, BETHESDA, MD 20892 USA
来源:
关键词:
aging;
hypertension;
magnetic resonance imaging;
neuropsychology;
D O I:
10.1161/01.STR.28.7.1410
中图分类号:
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号:
摘要:
Background and Purpose Advanced age and hypertension have each been associated with changes in brain morphology and cognitive function. To investigate the interaction of age and hypertension with structural brain changes and neuropsychological performance In otherwise healthy patients with essential hypertension, we compared young-old (ages 56 to 69 years) and old-old (ages 70 to 84 years) hypertensive patients (n=27) with 20 age-matched normotensive healthy control subjects, using quantitative volumetric MRI and a battery of neuropsychological tests. Methods Quantitative regions of interest and segmentation analyses were applied to MRI scans of brain to measure volumes of different brain structures and of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Severity of while matter hyperintensities (WMHs) was qualitatively rated in the MRI scans. A battery of neuropsychological tests was administered to each subject. Results The combined hypertensive group (young-old and old-old) had smaller volumes of thalamic nuclei and larger volumes of CSF in the cerebellum and temporal lobes and showed poorer performance in memory and language tests than did the control subjects. Main effects for age were significant in multiple brain regions of interest. The old-old hypertensive patients and age-matched control subjects demonstrated volume reductions in brain structures and increases in ventricular and peripheral CSF volumes compared with the younger subjects. There was a significant groupXage-group interaction in temporal and occipital CSF, not related to WMH, with the old-old hypertensive patients having significantly larger CSF volumes in these regions than the young-old hypertensives and both healthy control groups. Conclusions Hypertension exacerbates the morphological changes accompanying advanced age. Temporal and occipital regions appear most vulnerable to brain atrophy due to the interactive effects of age and hypertension.
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页码:1410 / 1417
页数:8
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