Journal of Ageing and Longevity (Aug 2022)

In-Clinic Measurements of Vascular Risk and Brain Activity

  • Jeffrey Boone,
  • Anna H. Davids,
  • David Joffe,
  • Francesca Arese Lucini,
  • David S. Oakley,
  • Madeleine J. Oakley,
  • Matthew Peterson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jal2030020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 240 – 251

Abstract

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Background: Cardiovascular disease and dementia represent two health problems that may be causally connected. Studies have shown patients with dementia to have reduced cardiovascular health measures, where patients with dementia also have reduced electrophysiological brain activity as measured by event-related potentials (ERP’s). Few studies have attempted to correlate the two: cardiovascular health and ERP brain activity. The objective of this study is to determine if there are ERP differences between patients with lower versus higher measures of cardiovascular risk. Methods: For 180 patients ages 53 (16) years, Audio P300 ERP amplitudes and latencies (speeds) were measured upon initial patient visit alongside other clinical evaluations. Cardiovascular risk was categorized into good versus poor levels for blood pressure resting and stressed, E/A Ratio, atherosclerosis, and carotid intima-media thickness. Results: Groups with good levels had lower latencies (faster P300′s) and higher amplitudes than those with poor levels across all cardiovascular risk measures, significant to p < 0.05 for most parameters. While both cardiovascular health and P300 metrics decline with age, poor blood pressure and plaque was seen to affect P300 performance across all age groups in this study. Conclusion: These data suggest correlation between brain activity, as measured by the P300, and five standard measures of cardiovascular health and this correlation may begin at an early age. While further explorations are warranted, these results could have implications on the management of preventative medicine by bringing preventative cardiology and brain health together.

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