The prognostic role of high blood pressure and the aggressiveness of blood pressure lowering in dementia are not well characterized. OBJECTIVE To assess whether office blood pressure, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, or the use of antihypertensive drugs (AHDs) predict the progression of cognitive decline in patients with overt dementia and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Cohort study between June 1, 2009, and December 31, 2012, with a median 9-month follow-up of patients with dementia and MCI in 2 outpatient memory clinics. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Cognitive decline, defined as a Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score change between baseline and follow-up. RESULTS We analyzed 172 patients, with a mean (SD) age of 79 (5) years and a mean (SD) MMSE score of 22.1 (4.4). Among them, 68.0% had dementia, 32.0% had MCI, and 69.8% were being treated with AHDs. Patients in the lowest tertile of daytime systolic blood pressure (SBP) (Յ128 mm Hg) showed a greater MMSE score change (mean [SD], −2.8 [3.8]) compared with patients in the intermediate tertile (129-144 mm Hg) (mean [SD], −0.7 [2.5]; P = .002) and patients in the highest tertile (Ն145 mm Hg) (mean [SD], −0.7 [3.7]; P = .003). The association was significant in the dementia and MCI subgroups only among patients treated with AHDs. In a multivariable model that included age, baseline MMSE score, and vascular comorbidity score, the interaction term between low daytime SBP tertile and AHD treatment was independently associated with a greater cognitive decline in both subgroups. The association between office SBP and MMSE score change was weaker. Other ambulatory blood pressure monitoring variables were not associated with MMSE score change. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Low daytime SBP was independently associated with a greater progression of cognitive decline in older patients with dementia and MCI among those treated with AHDs. Excessive SBP lowering may be harmful for older patients with cognitive impairment. Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring can be useful to help avoid high blood pressure overtreatment in this population.
A 2-month period of DC assistance is effective in reducing behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia patients and in alleviating caregivers' burden.
Although white coat hypertension may be present in 20% or more of hypertensive individuals, its prognostic significance is unknown. We compared prognostically relevant measures of target-organ damage among 24 individuals with white coat hypertension and age- and sex-matched groups of sustained hypertensive and normotensive subjects classified by clinical and 24-hour ambulatory blood pressures. Left ventricular and carotid artery structure and function were evaluated by ultrasonography. Left ventricular mass index was similar in white coat hypertensive (82 +/- 17 g/m2) and normotensive (78 +/- 15 g/m2) subjects but was higher in sustained hypertensive subjects (97 +/- 19 g/m2, P < .02 and P < .002, respectively). Similarly, carotid artery intimal-medial thickness was greater in the sustained hypertensive group (0.98 +/- 0.21 mm) than in the white coat hypertensive (0.84 +/- 0.16 mm, P < .05) and normotensive (0.76 +/- 0.18 mm, P < .001) groups. The prevalence of discrete atherosclerotic plaques was higher in the sustained hypertensive group (58%) than in the white coat hypertensive (25%, P < .05) and normotensive (21%, P < .02) groups. Cardiac and carotid structure in individuals with white coat hypertension resemble findings in normotensive subjects and differ significantly from those in age- and sex-matched sustained hypertensive subjects. These findings suggest that white coat hypertension may be a benign condition for which pharmacological intervention may not be necessary, a hypothesis that needs to be tested in longitudinal studies with clinical end points.
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