High Blood Pressure and Cerebral White Matter Lesion Progression in the General Population

Author:

Verhaaren Benjamin F.J.1,Vernooij Meike W.1,de Boer Renske1,Hofman Albert1,Niessen Wiro J.1,van der Lugt Aad1,Ikram M. Arfan1

Affiliation:

1. From the Departments of Epidemiology (B.F.J.V., M.W.V., A.H., M.A.I.), Radiology (B.F.J.V., M.W.V., R.d.B., W.J.N., A.v.de.L., M.A.I.), and Medical Informatics (R.d.B., W.J.N.), Erasmus MC University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; and Faculty of Applied Sciences, University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands (W.J.N.).

Abstract

High blood pressure is considered an important risk factor for cerebral white matter lesions (WMLs) in the aging population. In a longitudinal population-based study of 665 nondemented persons, we investigated the longitudinal relationship of systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, and pulse pressure with annual progression of WMLs. Means of blood pressure were calculated over a 5-year period before longitudinal MRI scanning. WML progression was subsequently measured on 2 scans 3.5 years apart. We performed analyses with linear regression models and evaluated adjustments for age, sex, cardiovascular risk factors, and baseline WML volume. In addition, we evaluated whether treatment of hypertension is related to less WML progression. Both systolic and diastolic blood pressures were significantly associated with annual WML progression (regression coefficient [95% confidence interval], 0.08 [0.03; 0.14] mL/y and 0.09 [0.03; 0.15] mL/y per SD increase in systolic and diastolic blood pressure, respectively). Pulse pressure was also significantly associated with WML progression, but not independent from hypertension. After adjustment for baseline WML volume, only systolic blood pressure remained significantly associated: 0.05 (0.00; 0.09) mL/y per SD increase. People with uncontrolled untreated hypertension had significantly more WML progression than people with uncontrolled treated hypertension (difference [95% confidence interval], 0.12 [0.00; 0.23] mL/y). The present study further establishes high blood pressure to precede WMLs and implies that hypertension treatment could reduce WML progression in the general population.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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