Sex Differences in the Association of Age at Hypertension Diagnosis With Brain Structure

Author:

Kaur Amanpreet12ORCID,Angarita Fonseca Adriana2,Lissaman Rikki34ORCID,Behlouli Hassan2,Rajah M. Natasha45ORCID,Pilote Louise12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Canada (A.K., L.P.).

2. Centre for Outcomes Research and Evaluation, Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Canada (A.K., A.A.F., H.B., L.P.).

3. Douglas Institute Research Centre (R.L.), McGill University, Montreal, Canada.

4. Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences (R.L., M.N.R.), McGill University, Montreal, Canada.

5. Department of Psychology, Faculty of Arts, Toronto Metropolitan University, Canada (M.N.R.).

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Sex differences exist in the likelihood of cognitive decline. The age at hypertension diagnosis is a unique contributor to brain structural changes associated with cerebral small vessel disease. However, whether this relationship differs between sexes remains unclear. Therefore, our objective was to evaluate sex differences in the association between the age at hypertension diagnosis and cerebral small vessel disease–related brain structural changes. METHODS: We used data from the UK Biobank to select participants with a known age at hypertension diagnosis and brain magnetic resonance imaging (n=9430) and stratified them by sex and age at hypertension diagnosis. Control participants with magnetic resonance imaging scans but no hypertension were chosen at random matched by using propensity score matching. For morphological brain structural changes, generalized linear models were used while adjusting for other vascular risk factors. For the assessment of white matter microstructure, principal component analysis led to a reduction in the number of fractional anisotropy variables, followed by regression analysis with major principal components as outcomes. RESULTS: Males but not females with a younger age at hypertension diagnosis exhibited lower brain gray and white matter volume compared with normotensive controls. The volume of white matter hyperintensities was greater in both males and females with hypertension than normotensive controls, significantly higher in older females with hypertension. Compared with normotensive controls, white matter microstructural integrity was lower in individuals with hypertension, which became more prominent with increasing age. CONCLUSIONS: Our study demonstrates that the effect of hypertension on cerebral small vessel disease–related brain structure differs by sex and by age at hypertension diagnosis.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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