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Table 1 Brain Imaging Studies of Patients With Hypertension Without Symptomatic Cardiovascular, Cerebrovascular, and Peripheral Vascular Disease First No. of Subject Age, yrs Author Treatment of Vascular Study Design Subjects Mean (SD) Imaging Modality Imaging Findings Risk Factor (Ref. #) Beason- Longitudinal; One-half with HTN 1. Both HTN and non-HTN groups 15 [ O] water PET under Held et al. With HTN (year mean follow-up, treated in year 1, 1), 70.8 (8.4) 6 yrs remaining subjects began 14 with, 14 (25) showed regional declines in resting rCBF the following conditions: without HTN of increasing areas affected from year 1 to 1. Resting state Without HTN antihypertensive year 7 and some areas of increased rCBF 2. Verbal Recognition (year 1), 67.7 treatment at year 3 or 5 of increasing areas affected from year 1 to Memory task (3.5) year 7, interpreted as age-related changes. 3. Figural Memory 2. Greater longitudinal decline in rCBF in Recognition task HTN compared with nonhypertensive group in the middle and inferior prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate, occipitotemporal cortex, posterior occipital cortex. 3. HTN group showed a significantly lower increase in resting state rCBF compared with nonhypertensive groups in bilateral premotor (inferior frontal) cortex, superior temporal cortex, hippocampus, left hemisphere primary motor cortex. 1 4. HTN group showed an inverse correlation between BP and longitudinal decrease in rCBF. 5. HTN group showed an inverse correlation between duration of HTN and longitudinal decrease in rCBF (i.e., a greater duration of HTN was associated with a greater decrease in rCBF in the superior, medial, middle, and inferior frontal lobe and prefrontal cortex). 6. Subjects with uncontrolled HTN showed a greater decline in rCBF in the inferior frontal, precentral, midtemporal, parahippocampal, and fusiform gyri compared with controlled HTN subjects. 1. No longitudinal changes in total brain Debette et N = 1,352; At baseline MRI, Longitudinal; Treatment data not al. (17) 346 with HTN, 61 (9) mean follow-up, provided 1,006 without HTN 6.3 yrs Structural MRI volume or temporal horn volume. 2. HTN and increasing SBP in midlife were associated with a more rapid increase in white matter hyperintensity volume over the average 6.3-year followup. These associations were maintained after adjusting for interim stroke. 2 Longitudinal; 15% of subjects taking N = 72 (7) 1. Increasing age was associated with Structural MRI den Heijer 513 (with MRI mean follow-up, antihypertensive increasing cortical atrophy, more et al. (15) + longitudinal 20 yrs medication pronounced in men than in women. data) 2. Antihypertensive medication use in late life, but not in midlife, was associated with more pronounced cortical atrophy. 3. U-shaped association between concurrent DBP and degree of cortical atrophy on MRI. 4. The U-shaped association was similar for users and nonusers of antihypertensive medications. 5. Concurrent SBP level was unrelated to the degree of cortical atrophy. 6. Higher DBP levels 20 years before MRI (midlife) predicted more cortical atrophy in later life in subjects without antihypertensive medication, but not in subjects with antihypertensive medication. 7. Higher SBP levels 20 years before MRI (midlife) was not associated with more cortical atrophy in later life. 8. A steeper decline in DBP over the 20 3 year follow-up was associated with significantly more cortical atrophy compared to a stable BP level over time. 9. SBP change over 20 yrs was not associated with the degree of cortical atrophy. Efimova 15 with With untreated or Longitudinal; All HTN subjects treated 1. Before treatment with an SPECT with 99Tc- et al. (26) untreated or ineffectively mean follow-up, 6 with antihypertensive antihypertensive agent, rCBF was ineffectively treated HTN, 53 months medication; ACEI (5 significantly lower in hypertensive treated HTN (5.7) subjects) or diuretic agent subjects versus control subjects bilaterally 11 without HTN Without HTN, (10 subjects) in the anterior parietal, posterior parietal, HMPAO 52.5 (3.8) superior frontal, inferior frontal, temporal, and occipital cortices. 2. 6 months of antihypertensive treatment produced significant increases in rCBF in all regions in the HTN subjects. ACEIs and diuretic agents showed no differences. 3. Decreased attention correlated with a decrease in rCBF in the upper frontal, anterior parietal, and temporal regions in 4 HTN subjects. Decreased psychomotor speed correlated with a decrease in rCBF in frontal, anterior parietal, and temporal regions in HTN subjects. 4. 6 months of antihypertensive treatment improved performance of HTN subjects on tests of attention, psychomotor speed, and abstraction, which correlated with increased rCBF in inferior frontal and anterior parietal regions. 1. Gray matter atrophy correlated with Firbank et 92 with HTN With HTN, 77 Longitudinal; All subjects with HTN Structural MRI baseline SBP but not DBP. al. (19) 41 without HTN (4) mean follow-up, treated with 2. Baseline total WMH fraction correlated Without HTN, 76 711 days antihypertensive with age. (4) medication. 3. Baseline total and deep WMH fractions were greater in HTN subjects compared with subjects without HTN. 4. No associations between total WMH fraction and SBP or between deep WMH fraction and BP. 5. Over 2-yr follow-up, total WMH fraction increased in both subjects with and without HTN. 5 6. Over 2-yr follow-up, change in total WMH fraction was greater in subjects with HTN compared with subjects without HTN. 7. Over 2-yr follow-up, the deep WMH fraction increased in subjects with HTN but not in subjects without HTN. Guo et al. N = 539 (100% N = 78.03 Longitudinal; 3.4% taking CT scan 1. The presence of white matter lesions (23) women) mean follow-up: antihypertensive was associated with an increase in DBP, 1. First CT scan = medication at baseline (24 24 yrs yrs before first scan). 2. Second CT scan 22.8% receiving = 32 yrs antihypertensive SBP, PP, and MAP over 24 yrs. 2. Higher middle- and late-life DBP and MAP, but not SBP and PP over 32 yrs, were associated with increased frequency medication at first CT and severity of white matter lesions. scan. Hannesdot 40 with treated With treated ir et al. HTN HTN, 69.3 (11.3) 1. Total brain volume significantly higher Cross-sectional Treated = 40 1. Structural MRI in untreated HTN vs. treated HTN. Untreated = 10 (24) 10 with With untreated 2. DTI MRI 2. No significant differences in gray untreated HTN HTN, 57.6 (6.1) 3. 1H-MRS matter N-acetylaspartate/creatine. 30 without HTN Without HTN, 3. White matter lesion volume load 68.2 (8.5) significantly higher in treated HTN vs. untreated HTN. 4. Fractional anisotropy significantly 6 lower in treated HTN vs. untreated HTN. 5. Positive correlations between executive functioning and mean diffusivity and between psychomotor speed and mean Nacetylaspartate/creatine in untreated HTN subjects. 6. No correlations between neuropsychological performance and MRS in treated HTN subjects. 7. Subjects with treated HTN performed more poorly only on memory tests compared to subjects without HTN. 8. Subjects with untreated HTN performed more poorly on a broader array of neuropsychological testing compared to subjects without HTN. (Subjects with treated HTN were significantly older than patients with treated HTN.) [15O] water PET during 1. Subjects with HTN showed range, 60–76 2 cognitive activation significantly greater left hemispheric Without HTN: tasks: increases in rCBF during CPT and trend range, 59–68 1. CPT level greater left hemispheric increases in With HTN: 9 with untreated Jennings Cross-sectional None treated HTN et al. (27) 5 without HTN 7 2. Auditory free recall rCBF during verbal free recall. task. 2. Subjects without HTN showed significantly greater right hemispheric increases in rCBF during both CPT and verbal free recall tasks. 3. Subjects with HTN showed a decreased responsivity (lower rCBF increases) in response to increased task difficulty compared with subjects without HTN. 1. Subjects with HTN showed muted Jennings 37 with Cross-sectional None treated 1. Structural MRI increases in posterior parietal and et al. (28) untreated HTN With HTN, 61.3 15 2. [ O] PET with 2 thalamic rCBF during both verbal and 59 without HTN Without HTN, 60 cognitive activation spatial working memory tasks compared tasks: with subjects without HTN. a. Perceptual motor task 2. Parietal rCBF was positively related to b. Verbal working verbal working memory performance in memory task subjects with HTN and negatively related 3. Carotid artery to verbal working memory performance in ultrasound subjects without HTN. 3. Subjects with HTN showed working memory–induced rCBF correlations between the amygdala/hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, not observed in subjects 8 without HTN. Longitudinal; All subjects with HTN 1. [15O] water PET: 1. Treatment of hypertension with either mean follow-up, 1 untreated at study entry a. rCBF response to lisinopril or atenolol maintained pre- yr randomized to acetazolamide treatment values for estimated CBF, prospective treatment b. rCBF response to rCBF, and changes in these measures treatment and with: working memory task elicited by the working memory task. scanned: 1. Lisinopril 2. Brachial artery 2. After 1 yr of either antihypertensive 20, lisinopril; 2. Atenolol dilation: treatment, the working memory tasks did a. brachial artery flow in not elicit a greater rCBF response. response to 3. Cerebral dilation in response to acetazolamide acetazolamide was unaffected by either Measurement of antihypertensive medication. peripheral and cerebral 4. Correlations between rCBF responses vasodilatory reserve in regions known to be involved in 43 with Jennings Lisinopril, 53.9 untreated HTN et al. (32) (5.6) at study entry Atenolol, 51.3 randomized to (7.4) 23, atenolol working memory processing (prefrontal vs. parietal, prefrontal vs. amygdala/hippocampus, parietal vs. amygdala/hippocampus) increased significantly after 1 yr of antihypertensive treatment with no significant differences between medication groups. 9 Jennings 41 subjects with With HTN = Longitudinal; Subjects with HTN Structural MRI 1. Reduction of BP to normotensive levels et al. (16) HTN from the 52.4 (7.1) mean follow-up, 1 randomized to treatment failed to prevent gray matter loss in lisinopril vs Without HTN = yr with lisinopril or atenolol multiple regions over 1 yr of treatment. atenolol study 65.9 (9.3) per Jennings et al. (32) 2. No significant correlations with (Jennings et al. study. cognitive performance scores and the gray [32]) Subjects without HTN: no matter regions showing change over the 16 subjects treatment treatment period. without HTN 10 a. Nondippers = Cross-sectional No patients received any Structural MRI 1. The number of lacunae and the Kario et al. 131 total 72 antihypertensive PVH graded I–IV on prevalence of patients with lacunae and/or (20) subjects with b. Dippers = 69 medication for at least 1 extent and confluence. advanced PVH (grades III and IV) were HTN: 31 with c. Extreme month before study entry. white coat dippers = 70 significantly higher in the extreme dippers and nondippers compared with dippers. HTN, 100 with 2. The number of lacunae per patient and sustained HTN the prevalence of patients with lacunae (focus of study) were, respectively, 2.3 and 52% in the a. 46 group with the greatest nocturnal SBP dip nondippers (first quartile), 1.3 and 40% in the group b. 38 dippers with the second greatest nocturnal SBP c. 16 extreme dip (second quartile), 2.0 and 52% in the dippers group with the next greatest nocturnal SBP dip (third quartile), and 2.3 and 64% in the group with the lowest nocturnal SBP dip (fourth quartile), indicating a Jshaped relationship between nocturnal BP dip and brain MRI findings. 1. All subjects with HTN Mentis et 17 with HTN With HTN = Cross-sectional 1. Only the territory supplied by Fluorodeoxyglucose treated with al. (33) (100% men) 25 without HTN (100% men) 68.2 (7.8) perforator arteries from the circle of PET: resting state antihypertensive Willis (base of the brain) and initial medication at recruitment. segments of the cerebral arteries had a 2. All subjects with HTN significantly lower rCMglu in the group Without HTN = 65.5 (8.9) 11 had 2-week washout of with HTN compared with the group antihypertensive without HTN. medication before CT 2. The group with HTN had reduced scanning. correlations (reduction of functional neuronal connectivity, pairwise correlations of rCMglu between regions of interest within vascular territories) in cortical territories of the MCA, ACA, MCA·ACA watershed area, and the thalamus compared with the group without HTN. Longitudinal; Meyer et 12 with 69.8 Significant increases in CBF values were All subjects with HTN 133 Xe inhalation method mean follow-up: al. (31) untreated HTN observed at 6, 12, and 24 months after started on 1. 6 months control of hypertension. After 36 months antihypertensive 2. 12 months mean CBF values failed to show medication and low-salt 3. 24 months significant differences from pre-treatment diet after baseline scan. 4. 36 months levels. Nobili et 39 with never Untreated HTN = Cross-sectional 61% of subjects with 1. CT 1. gCBF was significantly lower in the al. (29) treated HTN 42.69 (14.07) HTN receiving 2. Carotid ultrasound untreated HTN group compared with 62 with HTN Treated HTN = antihypertensive 3. 133Xe inhalation subjects without HTN, with significant receiving 56.46 (11.05) medication method rCBF reductions all explored regions. antihypertensive 2. Mean gCBF differed only slightly treatment between subjects with treated HTN 12 189 without compared with subjects without HTN, HTN with fewer individual hypoperfused areas observed relative to the untreated HTN vs. subjects without HTN. 3. No significant correlations between CBF and duration of HTN, MABP, total cholesterol level, and the presence of retinopathy or left ventricular hypertrophy in the whole group of hypertensive subjects. 4. Among treated HTN subjects, quality of BP control was inversely correlated with MABP and with cerebrovascular resistance (cerebrovascular resistance = CBF). Quality of BP control was positively correlated with CBF. Raz et al. 40 with HTN HTN = 61.56 Cross-sectional All subjects with HTN Structural MRI 1. Subjects with HTN had lower PFC gray (14) 40 without HTN (11.58) treated with matter volume compared to subjects Without HTN = antihypertensive without HTN. 61.63 (11.25) medication 2. Longer duration of HTN was not associated with any differences in regional cortical volumes. 3. Subjects with HTN had lower 13 prefrontal cortex white matter volume compared with subjects without HTN. 4. HTN was not associated with differences in overall WMH volume, but the magnitude of WMH volumetric differences between groups varied across regions of interest. 5. Subjects with HTN had greater frontal WMH volume compared with subjects without HTN. 6. Longer duration of HTN was associated with increased WMH burden. Cross-sectional 28% of subjects with 133 Rodriguez 26 with With untreated Xe inhalation method 1. Subjects with untreated HTN et al. (30) untreated HTN HTN = 62.07 HTN treated with demonstrated global reductions in CBF 10 with treated (6.71) antihypertensive compared with subjects without HTN. HTN With treated medication 2. Global CBF in subjects with treated 26 without HTN = 63.1 HTN was comparable to that in subjects HTN (7.03) without HTN. 14 Without HTN = 3. Subjects with untreated HTN 62.05 (9) demonstrated reductions in right and left hemispheric rCBF compared with subjects without HTN; subjects with treated HTN did not. 4. Significant negative correlation between duration of HTN and global CBF in subjects with untreated HTN. 5. Significant negative correlation between MAPB and global CBF in entire subject group (HTN and no HTN). Salerno et 18 with HTN With HTN, Cross-sectional All 18 subjects with HTN Structural MRI 1. The right lateral ventricle volume was al. (12) 17 without mean 69 (8) were treated with 56% larger and the left lateral ventricle HTN Without HTN, 69 antihypertensive volume was 86% larger in the subjects (100% men) (7) medication with HTN compared with subjects without HTN. 2. Subjects with HTN had a significantly smaller mean left hemisphere brain volume compared with subjects without HTN. 15 Longitudinal; 123 68.4 (3.6) Söderlund 1. Higher DBP measured 10 yrs before Not available Structural MRI mean follow-up, MRI was associated with more subcortical nondemented 1. Subcortical WMHs et al. (22) 10 yrs WMHs (linear relationship). SBP was not subjects rated by number and size associated with subcortical WMH (diameter), mm: number. a. 1–3 2. Higher DBP measured 10 yrs before b. 4–10 MRI was associated with more c. >10 periventricular WMHs (relationship not 2. Periventricular WMH linear). SBP was not associated with severity graded ranging periventricular WMHs. from 0, none to 3, large 3. A greater number of periventricular confluent WMHs was associated with lower scores on memory test performance. Strassburg 27 with HTN With HTN = Cross-sectional All subjects with HTN Structural MRI 1. Subjects with HTN had smaller er et al. 20 without 67.4 (7.3) taken off antihypertensive thalamic nuclei and larger cerebellar CSF (13) HTN Without HTN = medication with 2-week and temporal CSF volumes than subjects 68.7 (6.1) washout period before without HTN. 16 scanning. 2. There were significant interactions between a diagnosis of HTN and age (old age + HTN) being associated with smaller frontal cerebral volumes, larger temporal CSF, and occipital CSF volumes. 3. Subjects with HTN had more severe deep WMH ratings than subjects without HTN. 4. No differences in periventricular WMH ratings between subjects with HTN and subjects without HTN. 5. No significant effects of gray matter or CSF volumes and neuropsychological performance within HTN group. White et N = 72 al. (21) 82.1 (3.9) Longitudinal; 64% of subjects treated Structural MRI (baseline and mean follow-up, with antihypertensive was associated with change from baseline follow-up 24 months medication in 24-h monitored SBP but not for scanning) 1. The accrual of WMH over 24 months changes in clinic SBP. 2. There were no differences in WMH according to dipper status. Wiseman 103 with HTN With HTN = et al. (11) 51 without HTN Cross-sectional All subjects with HTN Structural MRI: WMHs 1. Subjects with HTN had smaller whole- 77.2 (3.7) were being treated with rated using the Scheltens brain volume than subjects without HTN. Without HTN = antihypertensive scale. 2. Periventricular WMHs and basal 17 76.1 (3.9) medication. ganglia WMHs were positively correlated with age. 3. WMHs were very common in both hypertensive and normotensive subjects. 4. The severity of total periventricular WMHs was greater in subjects with HTN compared with subjects without HTN. 5. The severity of WMHs was greater in subjects with HTN in frontal and temporal areas, but not in occipital or basal ganglia, compared with subjects without HTN. 6. The reduction in whole-brain volume was independent of the increased burden of WMHs. ACA = anterior cerebral artery; ACEI = angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor; CSF = cerebrospinal fluid; CPT = continuous performance task; CT = computed tomography; DBP = diastolic blood pressure; DTI = diffusion tensor imaging; MAP = mean arterial pressure; MABP = mean arterial blood pressure; MAPH = mean arterial pulmonary hypertension; MCA = middle cerebral artery; MRI = magnetic resonance imaging; MRS = magnetic resonance spectroscopy; PET = positron emission tomography; PP = pulmonary pressure; PVH = pulmonary venous hypertension; SBP = systolic blood pressure; SPECT = single-photon emission computed tomography; other abbreviations as in Table 2. 18