PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Lowering systolic blood pressure below 120 mmHg may reduce dementia risk among Black, Latino populations

A new study suggests that reducing systolic blood pressure below 120 mmHg over time may produce health-protective benefits against dementia and help reduce racial and ethnic disparities in health.

2024-07-16
(Press-News.org) FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Monday, July 15, 2024

Contact:

Jillian McKoy, jpmckoy@bu.edu

Michael Saunders, msaunder@bu.edu

##

Lowering Systolic Blood Pressure below 120 mmHg May Reduce Dementia Risk Among Black, Latino Populations

A new study suggests that reducing systolic blood pressure below the clinically safe threshold of 120 mmHg over time may produce slight health-protective benefits against late-life dementia and help reduce racial and ethnic disparities in both hypertension and hypertension control. 

Hypertension is one of the most modifiable risk factors for dementia, but most research on dementia risk reduction through blood pressure control is limited to White participants, even though Black and Latino populations disproportionately experience both conditions.

A new study led by Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH) and UCLA Fielding School of Public Health fills in this knowledge gap with findings that suggest lowering systolic blood pressure (SBP) in midlife may slightly reduce a person’s chances of developing dementia, particularly among Black and Latino individuals. 

Published in the journal Alzheimer’s & Dementia: A Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association, the study found that middle-aged adults who lower their systolic blood pressure by medication or any other intervention may gain modest health protection against dementia in older age. Black and Latino individuals had the greatest reduction in risk.

Among nearly half of Americans who have high blood pressure, only 1 in 4 adults have their hypertension under control, and these rates are even lower among Black and Hispanic people, who face multiple barriers to diagnosis and treatment. SBP (the top number in a blood pressure reading) refers to the pressure in the arteries when the heart contracts, and it is generally considered elevated above 120 mmHg, and high above 130 mmHg. This study is the first to estimate the sustained effect of lower SBP on dementia risk across racial and ethnic groups after adjusting for time-varying factors, and the findings underscore the benefits of blood pressure-lowering treatments and how these interventions can help mitigate racial and ethnic disparities in dementia risk. 

“Despite the increase in hypertension rates, minoritized groups are less likely to benefit from blood pressure reduction interventions, through health policies or access to medicine,” says study senior and corresponding author Dr. Marcia Pescador Jimenez, assistant professor of epidemiology at BUSPH. “We hope that findings like these encourage policymakers and health practitioners to increase access to treatment for blood pressure control for these populations to reduce disparities in hypertension and, subsequently, in dementia rates.”

Utilizing medical records, death certificates, and demographic data, Dr. Pescador Jimenez and colleagues from UCLA Fielding School of Public Health and Wake Forest School of Medicine applied novel modeling to examine the effects of hypothetical sustained blood-pressure-lowering interventions and dementia risk over a span of 19 years among Black, Chinese American, Latino, and White middle-aged and older adults. The 6,814 participants were part of the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, an ongoing study led by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. 

For the study, Dr. Pescador Jimenez, lead author Dr. L. Paloma Rojas-Saunero, a postdoctoral scholar at UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, and colleagues conducted multiple analyses to account for the effect of potential mortality when assessing the participants’ dementia risk. They included any type of blood pressure-lowering intervention into the analyses, such as medication, diet, and other health behavior changes.

During the 19-year study period, the overall risk of dementia among the participants was 8.8 percent. About half of the participants needed an intervention to successfully lower their SBP below 140 mmHg during the study period, while 86 percent required some form of intervention to achieve an SBP under 120 mmHg.

Compared to participants with no blood pressure-lowering interventions, each analysis found that blood pressure-lowering interventions among Latino and Black participants would have a slightly greater chance of lowering their risk of late-life dementia, compared to White participants. Surprisingly, the estimates showed a slightly harmful, rather than health-protective effect on Chinese American participants, but the researchers believe this finding may be a result of the small sample size and fewer dementia cases among this population within the study group.

In alignment with continued federal efforts to reduce disparities in high blood pressure, the team hopes that these findings encourage further research in racial and ethnic disparities in effective hypertension control.

“Next, we plan to investigate the robustness of these results in other representative samples of minoritized populations, particularly in studies where dementia ascertainment is not different across racial and ethnic groups,” Dr. Pescador Jimenez says.

**

About Boston University School of Public Health

Founded in 1976, Boston University School of Public Health is one of the top ten ranked schools of public health in the world. It offers master's- and doctoral-level education in public health. The faculty in six departments conduct policy-changing public health research around the world, with the mission of improving the health of populations—especially the disadvantaged, underserved, and vulnerable—locally and globally.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

When to let Amazon sell for you

2024-07-16
AUSTIN, Texas — On Prime Day, Amazon shoppers will be able to browse over 600 million products. They may not be aware that most of those listings are from non-Amazon sellers, who account for 60% of sales on the platform. Most are small- and medium-sized businesses: bookstores selling used hardbacks, toymakers selling original goods, and distributors unloading clothes. What shoppers also don’t see is the choice that the platform and the seller make about how to interact. Is it better ...

New OpenScope projects aim to pioneer the future of neuroscience

New OpenScope projects aim to pioneer the future of neuroscience
2024-07-16
By Jake Siegel SEATTLE, WASH.—July 15, 2024—How do neurons react to magic mushrooms? What happens in the brain when we see motion, or when we recognize grain patterns in a piece of wood? How do our brains track the subtle changes in our friends’ appearances over time?  The Allen Institute has launched four projects to investigate these questions through OpenScope, a shared neuroscience observatory. Just as astronomers use a few well-equipped observatories to study the universe, the OpenScope program lets neuroscientists worldwide propose and direct experiments on the Allen Brain Observatory pipeline. ...

Silicon photonics light the way toward large-scale applications in quantum information

Silicon photonics light the way toward large-scale applications in quantum information
2024-07-15
In a significant leap forward for quantum technology, researchers have achieved a milestone in harnessing the frequency dimension within integrated photonics. This breakthrough not only promises advancements in quantum computing but also lays the groundwork for ultra-secure communications networks. Integrated photonics, the manipulation of light within tiny circuits on silicon chips, has long held promise for quantum applications due to its scalability and compatibility with existing telecommunications infrastructure. In a study published in Advanced Photonics, researchers from the Centre for Nanosciences and Nanotechnology (C2N), Télécom Paris, ...

Better together: spatial arrangement of three immune cells is key to attacking tumors

Better together: spatial arrangement of three immune cells is key to attacking tumors
2024-07-15
There’s a frustrating fact about today’s immunotherapies for cancer. While sometimes they work beautifully — completely eliminating or greatly reducing cancer in particular patients — other times they don’t work at all. It’s a mystery. Scientists have posed several hypotheses to explain the disparity. Perhaps it’s the number of mutations present in a tumor, with more mutations leading to better responses. Or maybe it’s the tissue environment surrounding the tumor, with some environments supporting and others suppressing effective immune responses. But so far, none of these ...

How a ‘social good’ firm is defined can impact its value creation and value capital

2024-07-15
Ventures that pursue both commercial and social value creation have grown in popularity in recent years, but a new study published in the Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal better defines four distinct types of social ventures. By training a business model lens on these social good ventures, the study offers insight on how the model choices impact a firm's value creation and value capture potential. “Despite the popularity of the term ‘social entrepreneurship,’ not much was known about the business model of such companies yet,” says study co-author Lien De Cuyper of ...

American diets got briefly healthier, more diverse during COVID-19 pandemic

2024-07-15
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — American diets may have gotten healthier and more diverse in the months following the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new study led by Penn State researchers. The study — published in PLOS ONE — found that as states responded to the pandemic with school closures and other lockdown measures, citizens’ diet quality improved by up to 8.5% and food diversity improved by up to 2.6%. Co-author Edward Jaenicke, professor of agricultural economics in the College ...

Media Tip Sheet: Symposia at ESA2024

Media Tip Sheet: Symposia at ESA2024
2024-07-15
The latest ecological research will be on full display at the Ecological Society of America’s upcoming Annual Meeting in Long Beach, California, Aug. 4–9. A focal point of the conference, symposia consist of four 20-minute talks organized around a central theme of broad interest. These sessions consider topics from different angles, integrate multiple lines of evidence and offer new insights on ecological phenomena. This year, Annual Meeting symposia will address nonmaterial (“cultural”) ecosystem services, nature-based solutions to problems like stormwater runoff and urban heat, ...

Making rechargeable batteries more sustainable with fully recyclable components

Making rechargeable batteries more sustainable with fully recyclable components
2024-07-15
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Rechargeable solid-state lithium batteries are an emerging technology that could someday power cell phones and laptops for days with a single charge. Offering significantly enhanced energy density, they are a safer alternative to the flammable lithium-ion batteries currently used in consumer electronics — but they are not environmentally friendly. Current recycling methods focus on the limited recovery of metals contained within the cathodes, while everything else goes to waste.   A team of Penn State researchers may have solved this issue. Led by Enrique Gomez, interim associate dean for equity and inclusion and professor of chemical engineering ...

Biodegradable electronics may advance with ability to control dissolve rate

Biodegradable electronics may advance with ability to control dissolve rate
2024-07-15
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Biodegradable electronics allow for medical devices — such as drug delivery systems, pacemakers or neural implants — to safely degrade into materials that are absorbed by the body after they are no longer needed. But if the water-soluble devices degrade too quickly, they cannot accomplish their purpose. Now, researchers have developed the ability to control the dissolve rate of these biodegradable electronics by experimenting with dissolvable elements, like inorganic fillers and polymers, that encapsulate the device. The team, led by Huanyu “Larry” Cheng, the James L. Henderson, Jr. Memorial Associate Professor ...

Most Salmonella illnesses from chicken caused by few products with high levels of virulent strains

2024-07-15
URBANA, Ill. – Raw poultry is one of the main causes of Salmonella poisoning, which affects thousands of people in the U.S. every year. A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign shows that few products with high levels of very virulent Salmonella strains are responsible for most of the illnesses from raw chicken parts. The researchers suggest regulation efforts should focus on detecting and preventing those types of high-risk contamination. “Over the last 20 years, the poultry industry has done a really good job of lowering the frequency of Salmonella in poultry. However, the number of people ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Scientists track evolution of pumice rafts after 2021 underwater eruption in Japan

The future of geothermal for reliable clean energy

Study shows end-of-life cancer care lacking for Medicare patients

Scented wax melts may not be as safe for indoor air as initially thought, study finds

Underwater mics and machine learning aid right whale conservation

Solving the case of the missing platinum

Glass fertilizer beads could be a sustained nutrient delivery system

Biobased lignin gels offer sustainable alternative for hair conditioning

Perovskite solar cells: Thermal stresses are the key to long-term stability

University of Houston professors named senior members of the National Academy of Inventors

Unraveling the mystery of the missing blue whale calves

UTA partnership boosts biomanufacturing in North Texas

Kennesaw State researcher earns American Heart Association award for innovative study on heart disease diagnostics

Self-imaging of structured light in new dimensions

Study highlights successes of Virginia’s oyster restoration efforts

Optimism can encourage healthy habits

Precision therapy with microbubbles

LLM-based web application scanner recognizes tasks and workflows

Pattern of compounds in blood may indicate severity of gestational hypertension and preeclampsia

How does innovation policy respond to the challenges of a changing world?

What happens when a diet targets ultra-processed foods?

University of Vaasa, Finland, conducts research on utilizing buildings as energy sources

Stealth virus: Zika virus builds tunnels to covertly infect cells of the placenta

The rising tide of sand mining: a growing threat to marine life

Contemporary patterns of end-of-life care among Medicare beneficiaries with advanced cancer

Digital screen time and nearsightedness

Postoperative weight loss after anti-obesity medications and revision risk after joint replacement

New ACS research finds low uptake of supportive care at the end-of-life for patients with advanced cancer

New frailty measurement tool could help identify vulnerable older adults in epic

Co-prescribed stimulants, opioids linked to higher opioid doses

[Press-News.org] Lowering systolic blood pressure below 120 mmHg may reduce dementia risk among Black, Latino populations
A new study suggests that reducing systolic blood pressure below 120 mmHg over time may produce health-protective benefits against dementia and help reduce racial and ethnic disparities in health.