Heart health may affect mind
Los Angeles Times
For patients with high blood pressure who hope to ward off dementia, doctors have the same advice for those looking to protect their hearts and kidneys: Go lower.
In a comprehensive new study, researchers found that driving down patients’ systolic blood pressure readings to a new lower target level reduced their risk of developing mild cognitive impairment, or MCI, by close to 20 percent. MCI is a decline in memory and thinking skills that is slight but noticeable, and it affects between 15 percent and 20 percent of people over 65. For as many as half of those diagnosed with MCI, a diagnosis of dementia will come later.
The new research found that compared to subjects whose blood pressure control regimen was more relaxed, subjects whose blood pressure was more strictly controlled were 15 percent less likely to be diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment and subsequent dementia.
The new findings, presented Wednesday at the Alzheimer’s Association’s International Conference in Chicago, come a year after the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology adopted a new target for those with hypertension. Physicians groups had long considered blood pressure readings of 140/90 mmHG to be an acceptable target for those with hypertension, but in 2017, they urged physicians to get their patients with high blood pressure to 130/80 mmHG.
The new research suggests that there are powerful benefits to getting the first number in that reading—systolic blood pressure—to an even lower target: 120 mmHG.
Systolic blood pressure is the amount of pressure in a person’s arteries during the contraction of the heart muscle. Because it is the highest pressure to which the blood vessels are subjected, systolic blood pressure is thought
to have the most detrimental impact on the delicate capillaries that nourish the brain as well as the kidneys, heart and liver. In large populations, lowering that reading to 120 already has been found to reduce rates of cardiovascular disease and kidney failure.
The new findings emerge from a clinical trial called SPRINT (short for Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial), which began in 2010 and ran for less than five years. After trial subjects had been followed for an average of just over three years, the trial was shut down because the trial’s findings showed so strongly the benefits of the lower systolic blood pressure goal in protecting people’s hearts. In August 2015, a board of safety monitors said it no longer could justify maintaining some of the trial’s subjects at the systolic target level of 140 mmHG.
“What SPRINT has shown is that what is good for your heart is also good for your brain,” said the SPRINT Mind study’s lead author, Dr. Jeff Williamson of Wake Forest Medical School, who presented the findings on Wednesday in Chicago.
Williamson called it “very encouraging” that even a brief period of more intensive blood pressure control would show such powerful protective effects for the brain as well. Had the trial run longer, he said, there’s reason to believe that even more cases of mild cognitive impairment and dementia might be prevented.
The SPRINT Mind trial’s 8,626 subjects ranged in age from 50 to 100. None had diabetes, but all were considered to be at increased risk for cardiovascular disease. After a year in the trial, those assigned to have their blood pressure treated to the stricter target had achieved an average systolic blood pressure reading of 121.4 mmHG. Those assigned to the “standard treatment group” had an average systolic blood pressure reading of 136.2 mmHG.