Correlates of cognitive status of old patients with isolated systolic hypertension
Journal of Hypertension 16(7): 963-969
Article 1998 English
Authors
MS
Marie‐Laure Seux
LT
Lutgarde Thijs
FF
Françoise Forette
Abstract
2 min read
Objective To assess cognitive functions and their correlates for a dementia-free cohort of old patients with isolated systolic hypertension. Design Cross-sectional data from the randomization period of the European Trial in Elderly with Systolic Hypertension (Syst-Eur Vascular Dementia Project). Setting Sixteen European countries and Israel. Participants We studied 2252 patients aged 60–100 years (mean 70). Main outcome measures Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) and Spearman correlation of MMSE scores to demographic data or blood pressure. Results The MMSE was successfully completed for 1474 women and 751 men. The baseline blood pressure averaged 173 ± 10/86 ± 6 mmHg (means ± SD). Median age at which education of patients at school had stopped was 15 years. Men and women who consumed alcohol (28%) had median intakes of 8 and 3 g/day, respectively. The median MMSE score was 29 (range 15–30). The maximum score of 30 was attained by 609 (30%) subjects. Fifty-nine (3%) patients had a MMSE score of 23 or less. The MMSE score decreased with advancing age (r = −0.21, P < 0.001). Both for men and for women, it was positively correlated to the level of education (r = 0.30 and r = 0.32, P < 0.001). For women after adjustment for age and the level of education, the score was correlated negatively to systolic blood pressure (r = −0.07, P < 0.05) but positively to intake of alcohol (r = 0.06, P < 0.05). Conclusion In a cohort of elderly patients with isolated systolic hypertension, baseline cognitive function measured in terms of the MMSE score was high, probably due to selective recruitment of patients who were not clinically demented. Blood pressure was a weak contributor to cognitive status compared with age and level of education. Baseline cognitive function of women was negatively and independently correlated to systolic blood pressure.
Lutgarde Thijs, A. Amery, Riitta Antikaínen, P Bert, W. H. Birkenhäger, CJ Bulpitt, C. T. Dollery, Astrid E. Fletcher, F Forette, T Hakamäki, Paula Kivinen, Erkki Lehtom̈aki, Eoin O’Brien, Cristina Sarti, Jan A. Staessen, Reijo S. Tilvis, Bruno Trimarco, Jaakko Tuomilehto, Hannu Vanhanen, Olavi Vänskä, J Webster, Y Yodfat
Ruth Peters, Nigel Beckett, Françoise Forette, Jaakko Tuomilehto, Craig Ritchie, Ivan Walton, Adam Waldman, Robert Clarke, Ruth Poulter, Astrid Fletcher, Christopher J. Bulpitt
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