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Cerebral microbleeds are associated with blood pressure levels in individuals with hypertension

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posted on 2019-09-22, 08:51 authored by Lingchun Lyu, Jiayi Shen, Chunlai Zeng, Jiansong Ji, Wuming Hu, Tiemin Wei, Wei Mao

Objective: Cerebral microbleeds (CMBs), which appear as small dot-like hypointense lesions, are strongly associated with cerebrovascular disease. Recently, numerous investigations have suggested that hypertension and age are risk factors for CMBs; however, whether blood pressure grade and age rank are related to the severity of CMBs remains unclear. The purpose of this research was to assess the association between cerebral microbleeds and blood pressure levels.

Methods: In total, 460 consecutive hypertension patients (214 males and 246 females; aged 44–96 years, mean age 60.95 ± 6.82 years) from Lishui Central Hospital were enrolled and classified as CMB or non-CMB patients according to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Gradient echo T2*-weighted MRI was used to detect CMBs. Differences in blood pressure, CMB severity, and other patient characteristics were compared between the two groups. Multifactorial logistic regression was used to analyze the correlation between blood pressure and microbleeds.

Results: In our study, CMB lesions were identified in 123 patients (26.7%), including 39 patients with CMB lesions located deep in the brain. In the hypertensive population, smoking is an independent risk factor for CMBs. Additionally, systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and age are also independent risk factors for CMBs. Furthermore, a modest correlation was noted between the number of microbleeds and grade of hypertension.

Conclusions: This study provides novel evidence that microbleed severity is associated with hypertension grade. This conclusion emphasizes the importance of antihypertensive therapy in hypertension patients to avoid an increase in CMBs.

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