Magnetic Resonance Imaging Cerebral Abnormalities and Neuropsychologic Test Performance in Elderly Hypertensive Subjects
- 1 September 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Neurology
- Vol. 52 (9) , 905-910
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archneur.1995.00540330087019
Abstract
Objective: To search for a morphologic basis of cognitive impairment possibly associated with arterial hypertension using magnetic resonance imaging and a demanding neuropsychologic test battery. Design: Case-control comparison with age, length of education, presence of diabetes, and presence of cardiac disease as matching criteria. Setting: Austrian Stroke Prevention Study. Subjects: A total of 89 hypertensive subjects and 89 control subjects from a subset of 272 volunteers with no neurologic symptoms undergoing extensive diagnostic workup in a large-scale stroke prevention study among randomly selected elderly community members. Main Outcome Measures: Focal brain abnormalities and size of ventricles and cortical sulci as assessed by magnetic resonance imaging and neuropsychological test scores. Results: Hypertensive subjects more commonly showed areas of white matter hyperintensity and moderately severe ventricular enlargement compared with controls. While no differences were noted between the investigational groups in test results of memory capacity and conceptualization, hypertensive subjects tended to perform worse when assessed for attentional and visuopractical skills. These differences became significant when comparing the brain-damaged subsets of patients and controls with their counterparts without cerebral changes. The pattern and extent of neuropsychologic deficits was similar in hypertensive and normotensive subjects with abnormal magnetic resonance imaging scans. Conclusion: Our data strongly suggest the high rate of brain abnormalities among hypertensive subjects as the cause of their subtle neuropsychological dysfunction.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Further Observations on the Pathology of Subcortical Lesions Identified on Magnetic Resonance ImagingArchives of Neurology, 1992
- Brain magnetic resonance imaging and neuropsychologic evaluation of patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy.Stroke, 1991
- Silent cerebrovascular disease in the elderly. Correlation with ambulatory pressure.Hypertension, 1990
- Dementia due to vascular disease--a multifactorial disorder.Stroke, 1988
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Periventricular Hyperintensity in a Veterans Administration Hospital PopulationArchives of Neurology, 1987
- Incidental subcortical lesions identified on magnetic resonance imaging in the elderly. I. Correlation with age and cerebrovascular risk factors.Stroke, 1986
- Foci of MRI signal (pseudo lesions) anterior to the frontal horns: histologic correlations of a normal findingAmerican Journal of Roentgenology, 1986
- Neuropsychological deficits in arterial hypertensionActa Neurologica Scandinavica, 1986
- The Purdue Pegboard: norms and studies of reliability and validity.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1948