在老年人和年轻人中,短期血压变异性与低频波动的区域幅度呈负相关

IF 1.7 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Aging brain Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.nbas.2023.100085
Isabel J. Sible , Hyun Joo Yoo , Jungwon Min , Kaoru Nashiro , Catie Chang , Daniel A. Nation , Mara Mather
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引用次数: 0

摘要

独立于平均血压水平的血压变异性(BPV)与MRI和死后评估的脑血管疾病负担相关。然而,人们对其与脑血管功能障碍标志物的关系知之甚少,例如通过低频波动幅度(ALFF)测量的自发性脑活动减少,特别是在衰老时血管和神经元易感性的大脑区域。我们通过静息状态功能磁共振成像(fMRI)研究了社区居住老年人(n = 44)和健康年轻人(n = 49)的短期BPV和同时发生的区域ALFF之间的关系。在老年人中,收缩期BPV升高与广泛的内侧颞区和前扣带皮层ALFF降低有关。年轻成人较高的收缩期BPV也与内侧颞叶和杏仁核较低的ALFF有关,尽管在较少的亚区。在两组中,收缩期BPV和ALFF在左右全脑或岛叶皮层均无显著相关性。研究结果表明,脑血管功能障碍和血压短期波动可能是局部易感性。BPV可能是衰老时脑血管变化的一个未充分研究的危险因素。
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Short-term blood pressure variability is inversely related to regional amplitude of low frequency fluctuations in older and younger adults

Blood pressure variability (BPV), independent of mean blood pressure levels, is associated with cerebrovascular disease burden on MRI and postmortem evaluation. However, less is known about relationships with markers of cerebrovascular dysfunction, such as diminished spontaneous brain activity as measured by the amplitude of low frequency fluctuations (ALFF), especially in brain regions with vascular and neuronal vulnerability in aging. We investigated the relationship between short-term BPV and concurrent regional ALFF from resting state fMRI in a sample of community-dwelling older adults (n = 44) and healthy younger adults (n = 49). In older adults, elevated systolic BPV was associated with lower ALFF in widespread medial temporal regions and the anterior cingulate cortex. Higher systolic BPV in younger adults was also related to lower ALFF in the medial temporal lobe, albeit in fewer subregions, and the amygdala. There were no significant associations between systolic BPV and ALFF across the right/left whole brain or in the insular cortex in either group. Findings suggest a possible regional vulnerability to cerebrovascular dysfunction and short-term fluctuations in blood pressure. BPV may be an understudied risk factor for cerebrovascular changes in aging.

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Aging brain
Aging brain Neuroscience (General), Geriatrics and Gerontology
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