Hypertension is associated with reduced hippocampal connectivity and impaired memory
Ruiqing Feng, Edmund T. Rolls, Wei Cheng, Jianfeng Feng
Abstract
BackgroundThe objective was a large-scale analysis of the relation between hypertension, memory problems, and brain function.MethodsThe study design was to measure the association between a history of hypertension, and the functional connectivity between 94 brain regions, and prospective and numeric memory, in 19,507 participants from the UK Biobank, with cross-validation in 1,002 participants in the Human Connectome Project, and 13,441 individuals in the second release of the UK Biobank. A history of hypertension was measured by whether individuals were admitted to hospital for the treatment of hypertension, with the control group admissions for other reasons.FindingsA history of hypertension was associated with reduced functional connectivity of the hippocampus, and with reduced prospective memory score (FDR correction p<0.01). The reduced functional connectivity mediated the association between the hypertension history and the prospective memory score. A graded linear relation between both the hippocampal functional connectivity and memory impairment, was found across a wide range of blood pressure (r=-0.04). In 502,537 participants from the UK Biobank, a history of hypertension was associated with impaired prospective memory (p = 9.1 × 10−41, Cohen's d=-0.08) and numeric memory (p = 4.7 × 10−24, Cohen's d=-0.10). The association between hypertension, functional connectivity, and impaired memory was cross-validated with 1,002 participants from the Human Connectome Project; and for functional connectivity in 13,441 individuals in the second release of the UK Biobank imaging dataset.InterpretationThe reduced functional connectivity of the hippocampus, and the memory impairments, both related to hypertension across a wide range of blood pressure, are important for clinical practice.