White matter damage due to pulsatile versus steady blood pressure differs by vascular territory: A cross-sectional analysis of the UK Biobank cohort study.

Karolina A Wartolowska, Alastair Js Webb
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Abstract

Small vessel disease is associated with age, mean blood pressure (MAP) and blood pressure pulsatility (PP). We used data from the UK Biobank cohort study to determine the relative importance of MAP versus PP driving white matter injury within individual white matter tracts, particularly in the anterior and posterior vascular territory. The associations between blood pressure and diffusion indices in 27 major tracts were analysed using unadjusted and fully-adjusted general linear models and mixed-effect linear models. Blood pressure and neuroimaging data were available for 37,041 participants (mean age 64+/-7.5 years, 53% female). In unadjusted analyses, MAP and PP were similarly associated with diffusion indices in the anterior circulation. In the posterior circulation, the associations were weaker, particularly for MAP. In fully-adjusted analyses, MAP remained associated with all diffusion indices in the anterior circulation, independently of age. In the posterior circulation, the effect of MAP became protective. PP remained associated with greater mean diffusivity and extracellular free water diffusion in the anterior circulation and all diffusion indices in the posterior circulation. There was a significant interaction between PP and age. This implies discordant mechanisms for chronic white matter injury in different brain regions and potentially in the associated stroke risks.

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搏动与稳定血压引起的白质损伤因血管范围而异:英国生物银行队列研究的横断面分析。
小血管疾病与年龄、平均血压(MAP)和血压脉动(PP)有关。我们使用来自英国生物银行队列研究的数据来确定MAP与PP在个体白质束中驱动白质损伤的相对重要性,特别是在前后血管区域。采用未调整、完全调整的一般线性模型和混合效应线性模型分析血压与27个主要动脉束弥散指数之间的关系。37,041名参与者的血压和神经影像学数据(平均年龄64±7.5岁,53%为女性)。在未经调整的分析中,MAP和PP与前循环的扩散指数相似。在后循环中,相关性较弱,尤其是MAP。在完全调整的分析中,MAP仍然与前循环的所有扩散指数相关,与年龄无关。在后循环中,MAP起保护作用。在前循环和后循环的所有扩散指数中,PP仍然与更高的平均扩散率和细胞外自由水扩散有关。PP与年龄之间存在显著的交互作用。这意味着慢性白质损伤在不同脑区和潜在的相关中风风险中的机制不一致。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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