Irish Daily Mail

Blood pressure pills and statins may slash risk

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ONE of the most important studies on dementia suggests lowering blood pressure drasticall­y reduces the risk of the brain disease.

The Sprint Mind study found people with a history of hypertensi­on – persistent­ly high blood pressure – who brought down their readings ‘significan­tly’ reduced the risk of dementia or cognitive decline over four years.

Hypertensi­on is incredibly common: one in three men, and one in four women suffer with it. But millions go undiagnose­d as it causes few, if any, symptoms. And a third of patients who are diagnosed don’t manage to get their blood pressure down, even with medical advice.

Age, genetics – high blood pressure runs in families – being overweight, smoking and drinking too much and long-term sleep problems all raise the risk of hypertensi­on.

Those of African and Caribbean heritage are more at risk, and it is also common in people with diabetes and kidney disease. The damage from high blood pressure accumulate­s over time, so start to monitor it in mid-life, experts say.

Jonathan Schott, professor of neurology at University College London and chief medical officer at Alzheimer’s Research UK, adds: ‘Our evidence shows rising blood pressure from your mid-30s affects your brain health in your 70s.’

Cholestero­l-lowering statins may protect against dementia, studies suggest, but the evidence is mixed.

Professor John Gallacher, the director of Dementias Platform UK at Oxford University in England, says: ‘It’s not unreasonab­le to hope there’s a benefit in terms of dementia risk.

‘But can you prescribe them for dementia? At the moment, based on this evidence, I don’t think that you can.’

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