We know high blood pressure is hard on the heart, but what about the brain? A new analysis of existing research looked at a special type of brain scan called resting-state functional MRI (rs-fMRI), which shows how different brain regions communicate. The analysis found a significant link between having high blood pressure and having altered function in brain networks involved in memory and complex thinking. The effect was moderate overall, but stronger when comparing people with high blood pressure to those with normal blood pressure.
The research pooled data from 15 studies, with 11 included in the main calculations. It compared brain scans from people with high blood pressure to those from people with normal blood pressure. It also looked within the high blood pressure group, comparing those with normal thinking skills to those with some impairment. The analysis found the link was robust even when checking the data in different ways.
It's important to understand what this means right now. This analysis shows an association—a connection—not proof that high blood pressure causes these brain changes. The findings are based on imaging, which is a measure of brain function, not a direct measure of someone's daily thinking abilities or future dementia risk. The research suggests this type of scan could be a promising tool for detecting early signs of vulnerability, but more work is needed to understand the full story.