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Changes in vascular factors 28 years from midlife and late-life cortical thickness
Authors:Miika Vuorinen  Ingemar Kåreholt  Valtteri Julkunen  Gabriela Spulber  Eini Niskanen  Teemu Paajanen  Hilkka Soininen  Miia Kivipelto  Alina Solomon
Institution:1. Department of Neurology, School of Medicine, University of Eastern Finland, Kuopio, Finland;2. Aging Research Center, NVS, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden;3. Department of Applied Physics, University of Eastern Finland, Kuopio, Finland;4. Department of Neurology, Kuopio University Hospital, Kuopio, Finland;5. Karolinska Institute-Alzheimer Disease Research Center (KI-ADRC), Stockholm, Sweden
Abstract:We assessed midlife blood pressure (BP), body mass index, total cholesterol, and their changes over time in relation to cortical thickness on magnetic resonance imaging 28 years later in 63 elderly at risk of dementia. Participants in the population-based Cardiovascular Risk Factors, Aging, and Dementia study were first examined at midlife. A first follow-up was conducted after 21 years, and a second follow-up after an additional 7 years. Magnetic resonance images from the second follow-up were analyzed using algorithms developed at McGill University, Montreal, Canada. Midlife hypertension was related to thinner cortex in several brain areas, including insular, frontal, and temporal cortices. In elderly with thinner insular cortex, there was a continuous decline in systolic BP and an increase in pulse pressure after midlife, while in elderly with thicker insular cortex the decline in systolic BP started at older ages, paralleled by a decline in pulse pressure. No associations were found between body mass index, cholesterol, or apolipoprotein E ε4 allele and cortical thickness in this group of elderly at risk individuals.
Keywords:Blood pressure  BMI  Cholesterol  ApoE  MRI  Insular cortex  Cortical thickness
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