4.7 Article

Impact of Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Adolescence, Young Adulthood, and Midlife on Late-Life Cognition: Study of Healthy Aging in African Americans

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/gerona/glab143

Keywords

Black Americans; Cardiovascular disease; Cognitive aging; Dementia; Life course

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH)/National Institute on Aging (NIA) Neuroscience of Cognitive Aging Training Grant [T32AG050061]
  2. NIH/NIA [RF1AG05078202, R00AG053410]

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The study revealed that cardiovascular risk factors (CVRFs) in adolescence, young adulthood, and midlife are associated with late-life cognitive decline, with hypertension and diabetes having negative impacts on executive function and verbal memory.
Background: Midlife cardiovascular risk factors (CVRFs) increase risk of dementia. Black Americans experience an elevated prevalence of CVRFs and dementia. However, little is known of how CVRFs prior to midlife affect late-life cognition. We examined CVRFs in adolescence, young adulthood, and midlife with late-life cognition in the Study of Healthy Aging in African Americans (STAR). Method: STAR assesses cognitive aging among 764 Black Americans aged >= 50 (mean age = 69; SD = 9; range = 53-95). Participants' body mass index, blood pressure, glucose, and total cholesterol were collected during Multiphasic Health Checkups (MHC; 1964-1985). At STAR baseline (2018-2019), executive function, verbal episodic memory, and semantic memory were measured using the Spanish and English Neuropsychological Assessment Scales. Linear regression models examined associations between CVRFs and cognition adjusting for demographics and years since MHC. Results: At MHC, 36% of participants had 1 CVRF and 26% had >= 2. Twenty-two percent of participants were adolescents (age 12-20), 62% young adults (age 21-34), and 16% midlife adults (age 35-56). Overweight/obesity was not associated with cognition. Hypertension was associated with worse executive function (beta [95% CI]: -0.14 [-0.28, -0.0003]) and verbal episodic memory (beta [95% CI]: -0.22 [-0.37, -0.07]) compared to normotension. Diabetes was associated with worse executive function (beta [95% CI]: -0.43 [-0.83, -0.03]). Having >= 2 CVRFs (vs 0) was associated with worse executive function (beta [95% CI]: -0.19 [-0.34, -0.03]) and verbal episodic memory (beta [95% CI]: -0.25 [-0.41, -0.08]). Adolescents with hypertension had lower late-life executive function compared to normotensive adolescents (beta [95% CI]: -0.39 [-0.67, -0.11]). Young adulthood hypertension (beta [95% CI]: -0.29 [-0.49, -0.09]) and midlife hyperlipidemia (beta [95% CI]: -0.386 [-0.70, -0.02]) were associated with lower verbal episodic memory. Conclusions: Among Black Americans, life-course CVRFs were associated with poorer executive function and verbal episodic memory emphasizing the importance of cardiovascular health on the aging brain.

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