A large number of critically ill survivors had cognitive impairments, as assessed by the MMSE and Mini-Cog, at hospital discharge. However, the MMSE and Mini-Cog scores did not predict long-term cognitive sequelae at 6-month follow-up and cannot be used as surrogate endpoints for long-term cognitive impairment.
Background: Guidelines for hypertension treatment by the Eighth Joint National Committee (JNC-8) in 2014 recommended a target systolic blood pressure (BP) of <150/<90 mmHg in persons older than 60 years, in contrast to the 2003 JNC-7 recommendations of systolic BP <140 mmHg. This study evaluated the implications of raising the BP target on cognitive functioning and conversion from normal cognition to mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Methods: This was a longitudinal study of individuals older than 60 years enrolled in the NIH-NIA Alzheimer's Disease Centers. All had normal cognition at baseline. 453 participants were taking BP medications and had readings of <140/<90 mmHg at four annual visits (reference group). Two other groups consisted of participants with either systolic BP of 140-149 mmHg (n = 112) or ≥150 mmHg (n = 280) on three or four annual visits. Results: Compared with the reference and the 140-149 mmHg groups, those with BP ≥150 mmHg exhibited poorer cognitive status by Year 4 on the Mini-Mental State Exam, and they had a higher risk of conversion to MCI. The 140-149 mmHg exhibited poorer performance than the reference group on domains assessing attention and executive functioning. In contrast, their performance was not significantly different from those with BP ≥150 mmHg. Conclusions: Persons with BP ≥150 mmHg show a faster global cognitive decline and transition to MCI than those with lower BP readings. However, the poor cognitive performance in the attention and executive functioning domains for the 140-149 mmHg group indicates the need for further research evaluating the newer recommended cutoff.
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