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Sex and Cardiovascular Function in Relation to Vascular Brain Injury in Patients with Cognitive Complaints.

Authors :
Kuipers S
Biessels GJ
Greving JP
Amier RP
de Bresser J
Bron EE
van der Flier WM
van der Geest RJ
Hooghiemstra AM
van Oostenbrugge RJ
van Osch MJP
Kappelle LJ
Exalto LG
Source :
Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD [J Alzheimers Dis] 2021; Vol. 84 (1), pp. 261-271.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Emerging evidence shows sex differences in manifestations of vascular brain injury in memory clinic patients. We hypothesize that this is explained by sex differences in cardiovascular function.<br />Objective: To assess the relation between sex and manifestations of vascular brain injury in patients with cognitive complaints, in interaction with cardiovascular function.<br />Methods: 160 outpatient clinic patients (68.8±8.5 years, 38% female) with cognitive complaints and vascular brain injury from the Heart-Brain Connection study underwent a standardized work-up, including heart-brain MRI. We calculated sex differences in vascular brain injury (lacunar infarcts, non-lacunar infarcts, white matter hyperintensities [WMHs], and microbleeds) and cardiovascular function (arterial stiffness, cardiac index, left ventricular [LV] mass index, LV mass-to-volume ratio and cerebral blood flow). In separate regression models, we analyzed the interaction effect between sex and cardiovascular function markers on manifestations of vascular brain injury with interaction terms (sex*cardiovascular function marker).<br />Results: Males had more infarcts, whereas females tended to have larger WMH-volumes. Males had higher LV mass indexes and LV mass-to-volume ratios and lower CBF values compared to females. Yet, we found no interaction effect between sex and individual cardiovascular function markers in relation to the different manifestations of vascular brain injury (p-values interaction terms > 0.05).<br />Conclusion: Manifestations of vascular brain injury in patients with cognitive complaints differed by sex. There was no interaction between sex and cardiovascular function, warranting further studies to explain the observed sex differences in injury patterns.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1875-8908
Volume :
84
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34511498
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3233/JAD-210360