Author:
Sible Isabel J.,Yew Belinda,Jang Jung Yun,Alitin John Paul M.,Li Yanrong,Gaubert Aimée,Nguyen Amy,Dutt Shubir,Blanken Anna E.,Ho Jean K.,Marshall Anisa J.,Kapoor Arunima,Shenasa Fatemah,Rodgers Kathleen E.,Sturm Virginia E.,Head Elizabeth,Martini Alessandra,Nation Daniel A.
Abstract
AbstractBlood pressure variability is an emerging risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease in older adults, independent of average blood pressure levels. Growing evidence suggests increased blood pressure variability is linked to Alzheimer’s disease pathophysiology indexed by cerebrospinal fluid and positron emission tomography markers, but relationships with plasma Alzheimer’s disease markers have not been investigated. In this cross-sectional study of 54 community-dwelling older adults (aged 55–88, mean age 69.9 [8.2 SD]), elevated blood pressure variability over 5 min was associated with lower levels of plasma Aβ1–42 (standardized ß = − 0.36 [95% CI − 0.61, − 0.12]; p = 0.005; adjusted R2 = 0.28) and Aβ1–42: Aβ1–40 ratio (ß = − 0.49 [95% CI − 0.71, − 0.22]; p < 0.001; adjusted R2 = 0.28), and higher levels of total tau (ß = 0.27 [95% CI 0.01, 0.54]; p = 0.04; adjusted R2 = 0.19) and Ptau181:Aβ1–42 ratio (ß = 0.26 [95% CI 0.02, 0.51]; p = 0.04; adjusted R2 = 0.22). Findings suggest higher blood pressure variability is linked to plasma biomarkers of increased Alzheimer’s disease pathophysiology.
Funder
National Science Foundation
National Institutes of Health
Alzheimer's Association
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
8 articles.
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