Is the Brain an Early or Late Component of Essential Hypertension?

Author:

Jennings John Richard1ORCID,Muldoon Matthew F23,Sved Alan F45

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

2. Division of Cardiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

3. Heart and Vascular Institute, Hypertension Center, UPMC Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

4. Center for Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

5. Department of Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

Abstract

Abstract The brain’s relationship to essential hypertension is primarily understood to be that of an end-organ, damaged late in life by stroke or dementia. Emerging evidence, however, shows that heightened blood pressure (BP) early in life and prior to traditionally defined hypertension, relates to altered brain structure, cerebrovascular function, and cognitive processing. Deficits in cognitive function, cerebral blood flow responsivity, volumes of brain areas, and white matter integrity all relate to increased but prehypertensive levels of BP. Such relationships may be observed as early as childhood. In this review, we consider the basis of these relationships by examining the emergence of putative causative factors for hypertension that would impact or involve brain function/structure, e.g., sympathetic nervous system activation and related endocrine and inflammatory activation. Currently, however, available evidence is not sufficient to fully explain the specific pattern of brain deficits related to heightened BP. Despite this uncertainty, the evidence reviewed suggests the value that early intervention may have, not only for reducing BP, but also for maintaining brain function.

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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