Higher Blood Pressure is Associated with Greater White Matter Lesions and Brain Atrophy: A Systematic Review with Meta-Analysis

Date

2021

Authors

Alateeq, Khawlah
Walsh, Erin
Cherbuin, Nicolas

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

Abstract

Background: To summarise and quantify the evidence on the association between Blood pressure (BP), white matter lesions (WMLs), and brain volumes. Method: Electronic databases Pub-Med, Scopus, and Clarivate were searched in February 2020 using an established methodology and pre-determined search terms. Studies were eligible for inclusion if they reported on the association between BP and WMLs or brain volume in cognitively healthy individuals, while adjusting for age and intra-cranial volume. Results: Searches yielded 7509 articles, of which 52 (26 longitudinal and 33 cross-sectional), were eligible and had a combined sample size of 343,794 individuals. Analyses found that 93.7% of studies reported that higher BP was associated with poorer cerebral health (higher WMLs and lower brain volumes). Meta-analysis of compatible results indicated a dose-de-pendent relationship with every one standard deviation increase in systolic BP (SBP) above 120 mmHg being associated with a 11.2% (95% CI 2.3, 19.9, p = 0.0128) increase in WMLs and-0.13% (95% CI–0.25, −0.023, p = 0.0183) smaller hippocampal volume. Conclusion: The association between BP and brain volumes appears across the full range of BP measurements and is not limited to hypertensive individuals. Higher BP in community-residing individuals is associated with poorer cerebral health.

Description

Keywords

blood pressure, white matter lesions, total brain, hippocampus, magnetic resonance imaging

Citation

Source

Journal of Clinical Medicine

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution License

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