Alzheimer’s disease—one clinical syndrome, two radiological expressions: a study on blood pressure
- 1Department of Neurology, University Medical Centre Nijmegen, Netherlands
- 2Alzheimer Centre and Department of Neurology, VU Medical Centre, Amsterdam, Netherlands
- 3Department of Radiology, VU Medical Centre, Amsterdam
- Correspondence to: Professor Philip Scheltens Alzheimer Centre, Department of Neurology, VU Medical Centre, PO Box 7057, 1007MB Amsterdam, Netherlands; p.scheltensvumc.nl
- Received 10 October 2003
- Accepted 17 December 2003
- Revised 7 December 2003
Abstract
Background: Vascular risk factors could play a role in the aetiology of Alzheimer’s disease, but this has not been investigated in relation to neuroimaging findings
Objective: To evaluate the distribution of blood pressure and an indicator of atherosclerosis (pulse pressure) in patients with Alzheimer’s disease with and without small vessel disease.
Methods: 152 Alzheimer patients underwent 1.0T MRI scanning. Blood pressure was measured with a sphygmomanometer. Small vessel disease was assessed by the presence of lacunar infarcts and white matter lesions. The distribution of blood pressure and pulse pressure, with or without small vessel disease, was assessed by linear regression analysis.
Results: Patients with small vessel disease had a higher blood pressure, a wider pulse pressure, and an increased prevalence of hypertension. These findings were strongly age dependent: for patients under 65, mean systolic blood pressure was higher in the subpopulation with small vessel disease than in those without (mean (SD): 149.9 (19.3) v 135.7 (20.5) mm Hg; p = 0.02). Hypertension was more common in patients with white matter lesions than in those without (75.6% v 45.1%; p = 0.03) and the pulse pressure was higher (61.9 (14.4) v 51.7 (11.5) mm Hg; p = 0.01). There was no relation between blood pressure and the degree of (sub)cortical and hippocampal atrophy in patients without small vessel disease.
Conclusions: There was heterogeneity in Alzheimer’s disease patients with respect to blood pressure and pulse pressure. Alzheimer’s disease encompasses a heterogeneous group of disorders which share a common cognitive profile but with distinct radiological features with respect to white matter lesions.
- MMSE, mini-mental state examination
- MTA, medial temporal lobe atrophy
- NINCDS–ADRDA, National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke and Alzheimer’s disease and Related Disorders Association
Footnotes
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Competing interests: none declared







