Back to Search Start Over

Association Between Blood Pressure Variability and Cerebral Small-Vessel Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Authors :
Tully, PJ
Yano, Y
Launer, LJ
Kario, K
Nagai, M
Mooijaart, SP
Claassen, JAHR
Lattanzi, S
Vincent, AD
Tzourio, C
Anstey, KJ
Beckett, N
Beiser, AS
Birns, J
Brickman, AM
Burns, NR
Cengiz, M
Cosh, S
de Heus, RAA
de Leeuw, PW
Dorstyn, D
Elias, MF
Jukema, JW
Kikuya, M
Kroon, AA
Mahajan, R
McGrath, ER
Moll van Charante, EP
Ninomiya, T
Ohara, T
Ohkubo, T
Oishi, E
Peters, R
Richard, E
Satoh, M
Selvayanagam, J
Seshadri, S
Stott, DJ
Trompet, S
van Gool, WA
van Middelaar, T
Turnbull, DA
Tully, PJ
Yano, Y
Launer, LJ
Kario, K
Nagai, M
Mooijaart, SP
Claassen, JAHR
Lattanzi, S
Vincent, AD
Tzourio, C
Anstey, KJ
Beckett, N
Beiser, AS
Birns, J
Brickman, AM
Burns, NR
Cengiz, M
Cosh, S
de Heus, RAA
de Leeuw, PW
Dorstyn, D
Elias, MF
Jukema, JW
Kikuya, M
Kroon, AA
Mahajan, R
McGrath, ER
Moll van Charante, EP
Ninomiya, T
Ohara, T
Ohkubo, T
Oishi, E
Peters, R
Richard, E
Satoh, M
Selvayanagam, J
Seshadri, S
Stott, DJ
Trompet, S
van Gool, WA
van Middelaar, T
Turnbull, DA
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Research links blood pressure variability (BPV) with stroke; however, the association with cerebral small-vessel disease (CSVD) remains unclear. As BPV and mean blood pressure are interrelated, it remains uncertain whether BPV adds additional information to understanding cerebrovascular morphological characteristics. Methods and Results: A systematic review was performed from inception until March 3, 2019. Eligibility criteria included population, adults without stroke (<4 weeks); exposure, BPV quantified by any metric over any duration; comparison, (1) low versus high or mean BPV and (2) people with versus without CSVD; and outcomes, (1) CSVD as subcortical infarct, lacunae, white matter hyperintensities, cerebral microbleeds, or enlarged perivascular spaces; and (2) standardized mean difference in BPV. A total of 27 articles were meta-analyzed, comprising 12 309 unique brain scans. A total of 31 odds ratios (ORs) were pooled, indicating that higher systolic BPV was associated with higher odds for CSVD (OR, 1.27; 95% CI, 1.14–1.42; I2=85%) independent of mean systolic pressure. Likewise, higher diastolic BPV was associated with higher odds for CSVD (OR, 1.30; 95% CI, 1.14–1.48; I2=53%) independent of mean diastolic pressure. There was no evidence of a pairwise interaction between systolic/diastolic and BPV/mean ORs (P=0.47), nor a difference between BPV versus mean pressure ORs (P=0.58). Fifty-four standardized mean differences were pooled and provided similar results for pairwise interaction (P=0.38) and difference between standardized mean differences (P=0.70). Conclusions: On the basis of the available studies, BPV was associated with CSVD independent of mean blood pressure. However, more high-quality longitudinal data are required to elucidate whether BPV contributes unique variance to CSVD morphological characteristics.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1157337472
Document Type :
Electronic Resource