| Literature DB >> 22518290 |
J Richard Jennings1, Alicia F Heim.
Abstract
Accumulating evidence from animal models and human studies of essential hypertension suggest that brain regulation of the vasculature is impacted by the disease. Human neuroimaging findings suggest that the brain may be an early target of the disease. This observation reinforces earlier research suggesting that psychological factors may be one of the many contributory factors to the initiation of the disease. Alternatively or in addition, initial blood pressure increases may impact cognitive and/or affective function. Evidence for an impact of blood pressure on the perception and experience of affect is reviewed vis-a-vis brain imaging findings suggesting that such involvement in hypertensive individuals is likely.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22518290 PMCID: PMC3296233 DOI: 10.1155/2012/701385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hypertens Impact factor: 2.420
Figure 1Dorsomedial prefrontal area in which greater regional cerebral blood flow post-treatment related to either better blood pressure decrease (red), poorer post-relative to pretreatment working memory performance (blue), or both (green). See details and relevant review [28, 29].
Diagrammatic illustration of integrated study of the natural history of hypertension.
| Stage of Disease | Physiology | Affective | Cognitive |
|---|---|---|---|
| Normotensive/youth (genetic/familial risk) | All normal possible hyper-reactivity to lab stress, Mild elevation in SBP Opioid dysregulation | Anger? Reduced pain sensitivity | Subtle spatial attention, short term memory deficit |
| Borderline/Pre-hypertensive | BP >119/79 <140/90 with predominance of elevated DBP, sympathetic activation High cardiac output Baroreceptor adjustment; hyper reactivity to lab stress | Interpersonal difficulty Pain insensitivity Less awareness negative affect, positive affect? | |
| Early Hypertension | BP >140/90 High TPR Salt/diet sensitive Renin/angiotensin Aldosterone Sympathetic Structural/function brain changes Hyperreactivity | Above with transition to greater negative affect with inhibition of the expression of intense angry cognitive and emotive reactions | Mild deficits executive attention, working memory |
| Late Hypertension | Same BP or isolated systolic hypertension? maintenance of altered regulatory system | Continued high negative affect and expression of negative affect?; awareness of BP status may invert relationship | Deficits not as clear relative to age matched; Related to Alzheimer's Disease |