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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Vascular dementia
(VD) is more prevalent than Alzheimer's disease (AD) in Japan, while AD is more common in Western countries. In the Hisayama study, a community-based cohort study of Japan, the prevalence of VD decreased in men during the 7-years (1985-1992) follow-up period, while the prevalence of AD remained unchanged both in men and women. The incidence of dementia increases with age, particularly AD aged 85 or older.
Hypertension
is a major risk factor for VD. Other risk factors include age, prior stroke, diabetes, alcohol intake, heart disease, and smoking. In contrast, age, a family history of dementia, a low educational level, and low physical activity are risk factors for AD. The role of
hypertension
in AD remains controversial; there has been positive, negative, or no association existed between blood pressure levels and AD. A recent clinical trial has disclosed the potential preventive effect of antihypertensive treatment on the incidence of dementia, especially of AD. Although the role of vascular factors for the pathogenesis of AD is becoming recognized, the effectiveness of antihypertensive treatment on the prevention of AD should be further clarified in the future studies.
...
PMID:Hypertension and dementia. 1042 14
Vascular dementia
(VaD) is a heterogeneous pathology currently regarded as the result of a variety of causes. Different types of VaD can be identified according to different criteria. This heterogeneity might be one of the causes of the controversial results observed, up to now, in clinical trials. Recently, the 10th revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) explicitly identified subcortical VaD as a well-defined subgroup. Abnormalities of white matter are clearly detectable with computed tomography or magnetic resonance scans. The clinicoradiological association of dementia, blood
hypertension
, and other vascular risk factors, extensive white matter lesions, and small subcortical infarcts might be considered as a clinical univocal entity. Following the encouraging results of a preliminary pilot study, the above-mentioned criteria were followed to define a population of patients to be enrolled in a double-blind, parallel-groups, placebo-controlled clinical trial with nimodipine, which has been proposed as a drug that can improve cognitive functions in patients with VaD. The paper discusses the protocol design of this ongoing trial and its main entry criteria, with particular emphasis on the definition of the population to be enrolled. Implication for future trials in subcortical VaD are discussed further.
...
PMID:Nimodipine in subcortical vascular dementia trial. 1060 96
Vascular dementia
(VaD) is more common than Alzheimer's disease (AD) in Japan, while AD is much more frequent in Western countries. The Hisayama study, an epidemiological study on dementia in a Japanese elderly population aged 65 years or older, has shown that the prevalence of VaD decreased for men, while AD remained unchanged in both sexes during a 7-year follow-up period (1985-1992). Decreased prevalence of VaD seems to be due to decreased incidence of stroke in recent years, resulting from the management of
hypertension
. The age-adjusted incidence of total dementia was approximately 20 per 1000 person-years in either sex; VaD was more frequent for men and AD for women. Risk factors for VaD were age,
hypertension
, previous stroke, and alcohol consumption, while age was only a significant risk factor for AD. Although the Hisayama study failed to demonstrate the relationship of vascular factors to AD, the previously reported studies suggest that either
hypertension
per se or blood pressure changes appear to partially participate in the pathogenesis of AD.
...
PMID:Incidence and risk factors of dementia in a defined elderly Japanese population: the Hisayama study. 1248 Jul 28
Vascular dementia
(VaD) is the second-most-common cause of dementia in the elderly, after Alzheimer's disease (AD). VaD is defined as loss of cognitive function resulting from ischemic, hypoperfusive, or hemorrhagic brain lesions due to cerebrovascular disease or cardiovascular pathology. Diagnosis requires the following criteria: cognitive loss, often predominantly subcortical; vascular brain lesions demonstrated by imaging; a temporal link between stroke and dementia; and exclusion of other causes of dementia. Poststroke VaD may be caused by large-vessel disease with multiple strokes (multiinfarct dementia) or by a single stroke (strategic stroke VaD). A common form is subcortical ischemic VaD caused by small-vessel occlusions with multiple lacunas and by hypoperfusive lesions resulting from stenosis of medullary arterioles, as in Binswanger's disease. Unlike with AD, in VaD, executive dysfunction is commonly seen, but memory impairment is mild or may not even be present. The cholinesterase inhibitors used for AD are also useful in VaD. Prevention strategies should focus on reduction of stroke and cardiovascular disease, with attention to control of risk factors such as
hypertension
, diabetes mellitus, hypercholesterolemia, and hyperhomocysteinemia.
...
PMID:Vascular dementia: distinguishing characteristics, treatment, and prevention. 1280 86
Vascular dementia
is the second most common type of dementia. The subcortical ischaemic form (SIVD) frequently causes cognitive impairment and dementia in elderly people. SIVD results from small-vessel disease, which produces either arteriolar occlusion and lacunes or widespread incomplete infarction of white matter due to critical stenosis of medullary arterioles and hypoperfusion (Binswanger's disease). Symptoms include motor and cognitive dysexecutive slowing, forgetfulness, dysarthria, mood changes, urinary symptoms, and short-stepped gait. These manifestations probably result from ischaemic interruption of parallel circuits from the prefrontal cortex to the basal ganglia and corresponding thalamocortical connections. Brain imaging (computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging) is essential for correct diagnosis. The main risk factors are advanced age,
hypertension
, diabetes, smoking, hyperhomocysteinaemia, hyperfibrinogenaemia, and other conditions that can cause brain hypoperfusion such as obstructive sleep apnoea, congestive heart failure, cardiac arrhythmias, and orthostatic hypotension. Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leucoencephalopathy (CADASIL)and some forms of cerebral amyloid angiopathy have a genetic basis. Treatment is symptomatic and prevention requires control of treatable risk factors.
...
PMID:Subcortical ischaemic vascular dementia. 1284 65
Vascular dementia
(VD) has not to be considered anymore as a univocal nosologic entity. Based on different types of lesions, distinct subtypes of vascular dementia may be identified, each caused by diverse pathophysiological mechanisms. Among these subtypes subcortical vascular dementia (SVD) may represent a well-defined entity in terms of pathophysiology, clinical features and neuroradiological aspects. The picture is characterized by history of arterial
hypertension
and other vascular risk factors, clinical symptoms and signs including, besides dementia, dysfunctions related to subcortical-frontal circuit damages, and extensive confluent or diffuse abnormalities in the subcortical brain white matter, small deep infarcts as revealed by computed tomographic (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. The homogeneity of this clinical-pathological picture is essential for the success of controlled clinical trials in the field of vascular dementia.
...
PMID:Therapy of vascular dementias. 1520 19
Dementia and aging are not synonymous. Dementia is a progressive deterioration in cognitive and social and/or occupational functions that can eventually impair a patient's ability to live independently. Alzheimer's disease is the most common form of dementia. It accounts for 50% to 70% of all patients with dementia.
Vascular dementia
, responsible for up to 15% of all diagnosed cases, is the second most common form of dementia.
Hypertension
remains a significant risk factor for vascular dementia. The optimal level of blood pressure control for the prevention of dementia and whether one particular class of antihypertensive drug is more beneficial than another remains uncertain.
...
PMID:Hypertension and dementia: does blood pressure control favorably affect cognition? 1534 87
Significant progress in the field of VaD resulted from publication of the NINIDS-AIREN Diagnostic Criteria for VaD (G.C. Roman, T.K. Tatemichi, T. Erkinjuntti, et al.,
Vascular dementia
(VaD): diagnostic criteria for research studies. Report of the NINDS-AIREN International Workshop. Neurology 43 (1993) 250-260). Epidemiological studies confirmed the importance of VaD as the second most common cause of dementia in the elderly, representing 15-20% of all cases of dementia. In Europe and North America, Alzheimer's disease (AD) predominates over VaD in a 2:1 ratio; in contrast, in Japan and China VaD accounts for almost 50% of all dementias. Case-control studies have identified risk factors for VaD including ageing,
hypertension
, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, recurrent stroke, cardiac disease, smoking, sleep apnea, and more recently, hyperhomocysteinemia, among others.
Hypertension
treatment may prevent VaD and AD. This finding has enormous importance from the Public Health viewpoint to decrease the future number of patients with dementia in the elderly. Along with advances in the field of VaD came a number of controversies and damaging misconceptions and myths. Myth no. 1--
Vascular dementia
is a non-entity: The false idea that VaD does not exist is particularly destructive because it creates the perspective that VaD is unworthy of study or research. A condition that either does not exist or represents only a minute proportion of all cases of dementia in the elderly, lacks public health relevance and becomes a low priority for research by funding agencies and industry. In fact, vascular brain lesions are the commonest and most important component of dementia in the elderly. Myth no. 2--
Vascular dementia
is so difficult to diagnose that only experts can recognize and identify it accurately: VaD does exist and the diagnosis of post-stroke VaD, in particular is straightforward. Most cases fulfill NINDS-AIREN criteria for probable VaD; i.e., (1) there is acute onset of dementia demonstrated by impairment of memory and two other cognitive domains, such as orientation, praxis or executive dysfunction; (2) relevant cerebrovascular lesions are demonstrated by neuroimaging; and (3) a temporal relation between stroke and cognitive loss is evident. In the donepezil trials on VaD, post-stroke dementia represented about 75% of the >1,200 patients enrolled. Myth no. 3--Improvement in clinical trials of cholinergics in VaD is due to underlying AD, not to the vascular lesions. Experimental, clinical and pathological evidence has demonstrated cholinesterase deficits in VaD (independently of any concomitant AD pathology), including low acetylcholine in cerebrospinal fluid, and reduced choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) in the brain.
...
PMID:Facts, myths, and controversies in vascular dementia. 1553 19
Throughout the 1990s a variety of schemes for the diagnosis of
Vascular Dementia
(VaD) were proposed, including the ADDTC criteria for Ischemic
Vascular Dementia
, the NINDS-AIREN criteria for
Vascular Dementia
, Bennett's criteria for Binswanger's disease, and the ICD-10 criteria for
Vascular Dementia
. We undertook a retrospective analysis of a series of ambulatory outpatients with dementia to determine the prevalence with which patients were diagnosed by each of these diagnostic schemes, and to survey the clinical characteristics associated with VaD. We found that the diagnostic schemes for VaD were not interchangeable; patients diagnosed with VaD using one set of criteria were not necessarily diagnosed with VaD using other criteria. The most common clinical characteristics associated with VaD, regardless of the diagnostic scheme that was used, were
hypertension
, extensive periventricular and deep white matter alterations on MRI (leukoaraiosis), and differential impairment on neuropsychological tests that assess the ability to establish/maintain mental set and visuoconstruction, with relatively higher scores on tests of delayed recognition memory. Interestingly, the majority of VaD patients obtained low scores on the Modified Ischemic Scale, since cortical infarcts and a history of a sudden onset and/or step-wise decline in cognitive function were rare. We conclude that the current diagnostic schemes for VaD do not necessarily consider the heterogeneous nature of VaD. A new paradigm that seeks to describe, in addition to diagnosing dementia associated with cerebrovascular disease is discussed.
...
PMID:The clinical diagnosis of vascular dementia: A comparison among four classification systems and a proposal for a new paradigm. 1559 61
Vascular dementia
(VaD) is the second most common type of dementia in the elderly after Alzheimer's disease (AD). Evidence is presented indicating the occurrence of cholinergic dysfunction in VaD, independent from AD. Controlled clinical trials of cholinesterase inhibitors (ChEIs) in VaD and in patients with AD plus cerebrovascular disease are reviewed. Compared with placebo, ChEI treatment improves cognition, behavior, and activities of daily living. Cholinergic deficits in patients with VaD may result from ischemia of basal forebrain cholinergic nuclei that are irrigated by penetrating arteries that are highly susceptible to arterial
hypertension
, or from ischemic lesions in basal ganglia or white matter that sever the extensive cholinergic cortical projections. Cholinergic stimulation produces increases in cortical cerebral blood flow that may be relevant to the therapeutic effect of ChEIs.
...
PMID:Cholinergic dysfunction in vascular dementia. 1571 81
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