医学
联想(心理学)
高强度
内科学
钠
磁共振成像
放射科
认识论
化学
有机化学
哲学
作者
Sarah‐Naomi James,Jane Maddock,Nish Chaturvedi,Jonathan M. Schott,Alun D. Hughes
标识
DOI:10.1093/eurheartj/ehae666.3076
摘要
Abstract Background There is limited evidence on the relationship between dietary sodium intake (dNa) and brain health, and very little on sex differences in associations. Purpose To study the relationship between dNa and imaging measures of brain health in men and women from the INSIGHT 46 substudy of the MRC National Survey of Health and Development (British 1946 birth cohort). Methods Participants had measurements (dNa using 5-day food diary, anthropometrics, blood pressure (BP) body mass index (BMI)) at 60-64years. Whole-brain and hippocampal volumes, white matter hyperintensity volume (WMHV) and florbetapir amyloid-β positivity were measured using MRI-PET imaging at 69-71years. Associations (β (95% confidence intervals)) were estimated separately in men and women using generalized linear models with robust standard errors adjusted for potential confounders (age, diet quality, energy intake, socioeconomic status) or potential mediators (BMI, BP). Results Participants’ characteristics are shown in Table 1. In women but not men dNa was positively associated with higher WMHV (β[women]=32(1, 72) %/g; p=0.043; β[men]=-10(-27, 11)%/g; p=0.342); this relationship in women was independent of BMI (β = 32(1, 72)%/g; p = 0.043) or systolic BP (β = 31(1, 70)%/g; p=0.041). dNa was not associated with total brain volume, hippocampal volume or amyloid-β positivity in either sex. Conclusions Elevated sodium consumption in the diet is associated with cerebral small vessel disease in older age women but not men. This association was independent of BMI or BP.Table 1
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