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Biomedical

Cerebrovascular Variants and the Role of the Selfish Brain in Young-Onset Hypertension

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Emma C. Hart

Emma C. Hart

School of Physiology, Pharmacology and Neurosciences, Biomedical Sciences Building, University of Bristol, United Kingdom

emma.hart@bristol.ac.uk


  Peer Reviewed

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© attribution CC-BY

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724 Views

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2022-09-05

Doi: https://doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.121.18612

Abstract

"BACKGROUND: Variants in the posterior anatomy of the cerebral circulation are associated with hypertension and lower cerebral blood flow in midlife (age ≈55 years); however, whether these variants are a result of aging or long-term exposure to high blood pressure is unclear. Additionally, the role these variants play in early onset of hypertension (<40 years) and poor cerebral perfusion in this population is unknown. METHODS: We retrospectively examined whether specific cerebrovascular variants (vertebral artery hypoplasia and absent/hypoplastic posterior communicating arteries (an incomplete posterior circle of Willis) measured via magnetic resonance angiography) were associated with a diagnosis of hypertension in 220 young adults (<40 years; n=164 primary hypertensive [mean age±SD, 32±6 years] and n=56 [30±6 years] normotensive adults). Whether cerebrovascular variants were associated with lower cerebral blood flow (phase-contrast angiography) was measured in the hypertensive group only (n=146). RESULTS: Binary logistic regression (adjusted for age, sex, and body mass index) showed that vertebral artery hypoplasia with an incomplete posterior circle of Willis was associated with hypertension diagnosis (P<0.001, odds ratio; 11.79 [95% CI, 3.34-41.58]). Vertebral artery hypoplasia plus an incomplete circle of Willis was associated with lower cerebral blood flow in young adults with hypertension (P=0.0172). CONCLUSIONS: Vertebral artery hypoplasia plus an incomplete posterior circle of Willis independently predicts hypertension in young adults suggesting that this variant is not acquired with aging into midlife. Importantly this variant combination was associated with lower cerebral perfusion, which may have long-term consequences on cerebrovascular health in young adults with hypertension."

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ARTICLE USAGE


Article usage: Sep-2022 to Jun-2025
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2025 February 46 46
2025 January 46 46
2024 December 68 68
2024 November 51 51
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2024 September 44 44
2024 August 35 35
2024 July 27 27
2024 June 20 20
2024 May 32 32
2024 April 35 35
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Total 724 724
Show by month Manuscript Video Summary
2025 June 87 87
2025 May 84 84
2025 April 51 51
2025 March 64 64
2025 February 46 46
2025 January 46 46
2024 December 68 68
2024 November 51 51
2024 October 29 29
2024 September 44 44
2024 August 35 35
2024 July 27 27
2024 June 20 20
2024 May 32 32
2024 April 35 35
2024 March 5 5
Total 724 724
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copyright icon

© attribution CC-BY

  • 0

rating
724 Views

Added on

2022-09-05

Doi: https://doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.121.18612

Related Subjects
Anatomy
Biochemistry
Epidemiology
Genetics
Neuroscience
Psychology
Oncology
Medicine
Musculoskeletal science
Pediatrics
Pathology
Pharmacology
Physiology
Psychiatry
Primary care
Women and reproductive health

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