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Abstract TP558: Association of Blood Pressure and Cognition After Stroke

Authors :
Andrzej T. Galecki
Emily M. Briceño
Bruno Giordani
Robert D. Brook
Dolorence Okullo
Brisa N. Sánchez
Kenneth M. Langa
Lynda D. Lisabeth
Lewis B. Morgenstern
Mohammed U. Kabeto
Deborah Levine
Source :
Stroke. 50
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2019.

Abstract

Background: It is unclear whether blood pressure is associated with cognitive function after stroke. Methods: Cross-sectional analysis of prospectively obtained data of 432 subjects (mean age, 66; 46% female) with stroke (92% ischemic; median NIH stroke score, 3 [IQR, 2-6]) aged 45 or older without dementia from the population-based Brain Attack Surveillance in Corpus Christi project in 2011-2013. We examined associations between systolic and diastolic blood pressure (BP) and cognitive performance each measured 90 days after stroke. BP measured 3 times using standard protocol and averaged. Cognition was assessed using 4 tests: Modified Mini-Mental Status Examination (3MSE), animal fluency test, Trails A and B. Linear or tobit regression adjusted associations for age, education, and race/ethnicity as well as variables that were significantly associated with both BP and cognition. Results: Systolic BP was not significantly associated with cognitive performance (Model 1) unless diastolic BP was included in the model (Model 3)(Table). Both higher systolic BP and lower diastolic BP each were significantly associated with worse cognitive performance for all 4 tests (Model 3). Diastolic BP remained significantly associated with cognitive performance after adjusting for age, education, and race/ethnicity but systolic BP did not (Model 4). With further adjustment for clinical factors, diastolic BP did not remain independently associated with cognition (Model 5). Lower cognitive performance was significantly associated with older age, less education, Mexican American ethnicity, diabetes, higher stroke severity, more depressive symptoms, and lower BMI. Conclusion: Patients with higher systolic BP and lower diastolic BP are more likely to have worse cognitive performance after stroke but sociodemographic and clinical factors may explain these associations.

Details

ISSN :
15244628 and 00392499
Volume :
50
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Stroke
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5a7e5ddc12035df72d69b688e1eb11ab
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/str.50.suppl_1.tp558