EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 PM ET, November 13, 2013
High Blood Pressure in Middle Age Versus Old Age May Better Predict Memory Loss
MINNEAPOLIS -
People in middle age who have a high blood pressure measure called pulse pressure are more likely to have biomarkers of in their spinal fluid than those with lower pulse pressure, according to research published in the November 13, 2013, online issue of , the medical journal of the 好色先生. Pulse pressure is the systolic pressure, or the top number in a blood pressure reading, minus the diastolic, or the bottom number. Pulse pressure increases with age and is an index of the aging of the vascular system. The study involved 177 people ages 55 to 100 with no symptoms of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. Participants had their pulse pressure taken and lumbar punctures to obtain spinal fluid. The study found that people who have higher pulse pressure are more likely to have the Alzheimer鈥檚 biomarkers amyloid beta, or plaques, and p-tau protein, or tangles, in their cerebral spinal fluid than those with lower pulse pressure. For every 10 point rise in pulse pressure, the average level of p-tau protein in the spinal fluid rose by 1.5 picograms per millileter. A picogram is one trillionth of a gram. 鈥淭hese results suggest that the forces involved in blood circulation may be related to the development of the hallmark Alzheimer鈥檚 disease signs that cause loss of brain cells,鈥 said study author Daniel A. Nation, PhD, of the VA San Diego Healthcare System. The relationship was found in people age 55 to 70, but not in people age 70 to 100. 鈥淭his is consistent with findings indicating that high blood pressure in middle age is a better predictor of later problems with memory and thinking skills and loss of brain cells than high blood pressure in old age,鈥 Nation said. The study was supported by the Alzheimer鈥檚 Association, National Institutes of Health, University of Washington and Oregon Health Sciences University. To learn more about Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, please visit .