Title of article
Carotid artery intima-media thickness and cognition in cardiovascular disease
Author/Authors
Andreana P. Haley، نويسنده , , Daniel E. Forman، نويسنده , , Athena Poppas، نويسنده , , Karin F. Hoth، نويسنده , , John Gunstad، نويسنده , , Angela L. Jefferson، نويسنده , , Robert H. Paul، نويسنده , , Albert S.H. Ler، نويسنده , , Lawrence H. Sweet، نويسنده , , Ronald A. Cohen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
7
From page
148
To page
154
Abstract
Background
Increased carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT) is a non-invasive marker of systemic arterial disease. Increased IMT has been associated with atherosclerosis, abnormal arterial mechanics, myocardial infarction, and stroke. Given evidence of a relationship between cardiovascular health and attention-executive-psychomotor functioning, the purpose of this study was to examine IMT in relation to neuropsychological test performance in patients with a variety of cardiovascular diagnoses.
Methods
One hundred and nine participants, ages 55 to 85, underwent neuropsychological assessment and B-mode ultrasound of the left common carotid artery. IMT was calculated using an automated algorithm based on a validated edge-detection technique. The relationship between IMT and measures of language, memory, visual–spatial abilities and attention-executive-psychomotor functioning was modeled using hierarchical linear regression analyses adjusted for age, education, sex, cardiovascular risk, current systolic blood pressure, and history of coronary artery disease (CAD).
Results
Increased IMT was associated with significantly lower performance in the attention-executive-psychomotor domain (IMT beta = − 0.26, p < .01), independent of age, education, sex, cardiovascular risk, current systolic blood pressure, and CAD (F(10,100) = 3.61, p < .001). IMT was not significantly related to language, memory, or visual–spatial abilities.
Conclusions
Our findings suggest that, in patients with cardiovascular disease, IMT may be associated with the integrity of frontal subcortical networks responsible for attention-executive-psychomotor performance. Future studies are needed to clarify the mechanisms by which IMT affects cognition and examine potential interactions between increased IMT and other measures of cardiovascular health such as blood pressure variability, cardiac systolic performance, and systemic perfusion.
Keywords
atherosclerosis , IMT , carotid arteries , B-mode ultrasound , Cognition , cardiovascular diseases
Journal title
International Journal of Cardiology
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
International Journal of Cardiology
Record number
815433
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