Article (Scientific journals)
Hyperinsulinemia and elevated systolic blood pressure independently predict white matter hyperintensities with associated cognitive decrement in the middle-aged offspring of dementia patients.
Hawkins, Keith A.; Emadi, Nazli; Pearlson, Godfrey D. et al.
2017In Metabolic Brain Disease
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Keywords :
Cerebrovascular disease; Cognition; Dementia risk; Hypertension; Type 2 diabetes; White matter hyperintensity volume
Abstract :
[en] Cerebrovascular disease is an independent risk factor for dementia that may also be synergistic with Alzheimer's disease. In recent years attention has switched from cerebral infarcts to microvascular disease as the primary cause of cerebrovascular cognitive decline, with damage to the white matter the primary mechanism. Uncertainties remain regarding the risks posed by different types vascular threat, the extent to which cerebrovascular damage occurs in middle age, and whether relatively "normal" amounts of white matter damage are accompanied by meaningful degrees of cognitive decline. We explored these issues via laboratory, cardiovascular, cognitive, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data in 67 middle-aged cognitively normal offspring of dementia patients. The sample was enriched for vascular risk. Plasma insulin, 24-h systolic blood pressure, body mass index, age, and % small dense LDL cholesterol were the strongest correlates of MRI white matter hyperintensity (WMH) volume. With shared variance controlled for, 24 h systolic BP, plasma insulin, and age remained as significant predictors of WMH volume. An interaction variable (24 h BP * insulin) did not improve the prediction of WMH. WMH volume correlated negatively with cognition. No evidence for an ApoE epsilon4 effect emerged for either WMH or cognition. Hypertension and hyperinsulinemia appear to pose independent, consequential threats to the cerebral small vessel vasculature in middle age, reflected in the presence of areas of WMH on MRI scans. Our data show that even modest WMH volumes in middle age are associated with cognitive decrement, underscoring the importance of aggressive treatment and lifestyle modifications to address vascular risk throughout adulthood.
Disciplines :
Endocrinology, metabolism & nutrition
Author, co-author :
Hawkins, Keith A.
Emadi, Nazli
Pearlson, Godfrey D.
Winkler, Anderson ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Form. doc. sc. bioméd. & pharma.
Taylor, Beth
Dulipsingh, Latha
King, Diana
Pittman, Brian
Blank, Karen
Language :
English
Title :
Hyperinsulinemia and elevated systolic blood pressure independently predict white matter hyperintensities with associated cognitive decrement in the middle-aged offspring of dementia patients.
Publication date :
2017
Journal title :
Metabolic Brain Disease
ISSN :
0885-7490
eISSN :
1573-7365
Publisher :
Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York, United States - New York
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 04 May 2017

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