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Effect of hypertension on the resting-state functional connectivity in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD).

Authors
Son, SJ  | Kim, J | Lee, E | Park, JY | Namkoong, K | Hong, CH  | Ku, J | Kim, E | Oh, BH
Citation
Archives of gerontology and geriatrics, 60(1). : 210-216, 2015
Journal Title
Archives of gerontology and geriatrics
ISSN
0167-49431872-6976
Abstract
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Although hypertension is known to be a risk factor for AD, the effects of hypertension on brain function in AD patients are not well understood. We investigated alterations in resting-state functional connectivity according to the presence of hypertension in AD patients by using a method of correlation analysis based on a seed region in the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC). We also determined whether differences in resting-state connectivity were associated with gray matter atrophy.

METHODS: Thirty-seven AD patients (18 patients with hypertension and 19 patients without hypertension) underwent the resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging. We obtained the PCC maps by a temporal correlation method, to identify alterations in the functional connectivity of the PCC in hypertensive group relative to non-hypertensive group. Voxel-based morphometry analysis was also applied to adjust the confounding effect of gray matter atrophy.

RESULTS: We detected a decreased connectivity to the PCC in the regions of subgenual anterior cingulated cortex (ACC) in hypertensive group relative to non-hypertensive group. However, we observed a pattern of increased connectivity between the PCC and the left inferior parietal cortex in hypertensive group. After correction for gray matter atrophy, all detected regions still remained significant.

CONCLUSIONS: Altered connectivity in AD patients with hypertension suggests the possibility that hypertension impairs resting-state functional connectivity of the AD brain, inducing a compensational process outside the impaired networks or disequilibrium in brain connectivity. This finding may account for an additional contribution of hypertension to the pathophysiology of AD.
MeSH

DOI
10.1016/j.archger.2014.09.012
PMID
25307953
Appears in Collections:
Journal Papers > School of Medicine / Graduate School of Medicine > Psychiatry & Behavioural Sciences
Ajou Authors
손, 상준  |  홍, 창형
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