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David Baxter PhD

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High blood pressure in midlife linked to later decline in memory, thinking skills
by Beverly Merz, Harvard Health Blog
August 7, 2014

Fleetwood Mac?s hit song, ?Don?t stop thinking about tomorrow,? got a second life as the anthem for then-candidate Bill Clinton?s first campaign for President. A new report in JAMA Neurology may trigger the return of that earworm. The report offers yet another reminder that tomorrow may not be better if you have uncontrolled high blood pressure.

Researchers with the long-term Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Neurocognitive Study followed the health and mental function of nearly 13,500 men and women for more than 20 years. All of the participants were between the ages of 45 and 64 years when the study began; 76% were white and 24% were African-American. Between 1990 and 1992, the participants took three tests that measured memory and thinking skills. They took the same tests six years later, and again between 2011 and 2013. Their blood pressure was also measured, and researchers noted which participants were taking medicine to control high blood pressure (also known as hypertension).

There was a general decline over 20 years in memory and thinking skills (collectively called cognitive function). But high blood pressure in middle age was clearly linked with an increased risk of loss of memory and thinking skills:

  • The decline among participants with high blood pressure was 6.5% greater than in those with normal blood pressure.
  • The decline among those with high blood pressure was more pronounced in whites than in African-Americans. However, because African-Americans had a higher death rate before the last set of tests, the researchers believe that their proportionately small number remaining may have skewed the results.
  • Among participants with high blood pressure in middle age, those who were taking medication to control it lost less cognitive ground over time than those with untreated high blood pressure.
  • Those who had normal blood pressure in midlife and who developed high blood pressure in their late 60s, 70s, and 80s had similar test scores as those who had normal blood pressure throughout.

?This provides more evidence that hypertension contributes to lost memory and reasoning ability over the long term, ? says Melinda C. Power, ScD, an author of the study who just moved from the Harvard School of Public Health to Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. The findings dovetail with an analysis that Power and her colleagues at the Harvard School of Public Health published last winter in the journal Epidemiology. It showed that the longer a person lives with high blood pressure, the more likely he or she is to develop memory loss and to have difficulty thinking.

High blood pressure and memory
An important strength of this study is its duration. It is the first study to track blood pressure and brain function over 20 years. But keep in mind that the ARIC study is an observational investigation. It can?t prove that high blood pressure causes declines in memory and thinking skills, and it definitely doesn?t prove that treating high blood pressure in middle age protects memory and thinking skills. Even so, Power says, observational studies can do things that clinical trials can?t, like track more people over a longer time.

The ARIC report serves as a reminder to keep an eye on your blood pressure. A healthy blood pressure is under 120/80. Although the guidelines from various expert groups aren?t in complete accord on when to begin treating high blood pressure, how to do it, and what target to aim for, most agree that otherwise healthy people under age 60 with high blood pressure should aim for a goal of under 140/90. That said, individual recommendations should be based on age, medication use, and general state of health. The appropriate goal for you, and the way to reach it, is best decided in a discussion with your doctor.

Preventing blood pressure from creeping into the unhealthy range is even better than treating high blood pressure. These lifestyle strategies are excellent ways to do this:

  • Keep your weight in the healthy range
  • Eat a heart-healthy diet with plenty of fruits and vegetables
  • Watch your salt intake, most of which comes from processed foods
  • Exercise daily, or at least five times a week
  • Limit the alcohol?no more than one drink a day for women, no more than two a day for men
  • Don?t smoke or use other tobacco products

The main take-home lesson from this study and others like it, says Power, is this: The longer you live with normal blood pressure, the less likely you are to have memory and reasoning problems when you?re older.

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Daniel E.

daniel@psychlinks.ca
Administrator
Why Do Anxiety and High Blood Pressure Go Hand-In-Hand? -- Psychology Today

Non-drug treatments for high blood pressure tend to be the same treatments that lower anxiety. The following list of treatments may both lower blood pressure and reduce anxiety:

  • Yoga: There is now a significant amount of research on yoga as a possible treatment for anxiety. Research also indicates that yoga may help treat hypertension if it incorporates three particular elements: poses, meditation, and breath control.
  • Exercise: Review articles summarizing the research on exercise's impacts on hypertension and on anxiety conclude that three factors are important for effective results: frequency (the best is daily), intensity (it's helpful, at least some of the time, to pump it up), and time (30-60 minutes).
  • Sex
  • Sunshine, outdoor scenes, and natural environments
  • Acupuncture
  • Massage
  • Biofeedback
  • Managing alcohol consumption
  • Addressing negative worry habits: Use thought substitution-that is, replace worried thoughts with a visualization of a positive scene. The scene needn't be a solution to your problem. Just visualize any situation in which you see yourself feeling relaxed-such as playing with children, floating in the water at the beach, lying in the sunshine, or sitting in a garden with colorful flowers in full bloom.
  • Sleep: Beware, however, of taking pills for sleep. Many come with the risk of negative side effects.
  • Meditate
  • Use a float tank: Restful floating seems to reduce anxiety, at least temporarily, as well as lowers blood pressure. More studies are needed to establish whether ongoing use of flotation treatments removes these difficulties over the long-term.
  • Problem-solve: The single best stress-reducer is to find solutions to the dilemmas you are facing.
 
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