Effects of congestive heart failure on the brain

01:20 - Source: CNN

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Patients who receive a diagnosis of coronary heart disease are at higherrisk for cognitive decline later on, a new study shows.

The study, published Monday in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, found that scores on cognitive tests – including verbal memory and orientation of time – dropped faster after patients received such a diagnosis than they did leading up to it.

“This study adds to the increasing body of literature that showcases how the heart and brain work together,” said Dr. Neelum T. Aggarwal, director of research for the Rush Heart Center for Women and a cognitive neurologist at its Cardiology Cognitive Clinic. She was not involved in the study.

“We are now seeing more issues related to cognitive function from heart disease as more people are living longer, and also undergoing more heart procedures, and placed on medications,” Aggarwal wrote in an email.

The authors of the study say previous research on the issuehas been a mixed bag, often focused on the role of conditions like strokes and sometimes showing a more rapid cognitive decline thereafter. But the new study found a longer-term impact on the brain, following up with stroke-free adults for a median of 12 years and looking at a subset who had been diagnosed with a heart attack or angina, a kind of chest pain resulting from decreased flow of blood to the heart.

Heart attack patients “had a significantly faster memory decline than those with an incident angina,” the authors noted.

Cardiovascular disease is thought to affect the brain in multiple ways, experts say. It could impact small blood vessels, disrupting the flow of oxygen to parts of the brain. And the link between the two could stem from common risk factors that start earlier in life, such as obesity, diabetes and high blood pressure. The new findings suggest that there could be a gradual process at play affecting blood flow and the brain, but how it works is still unclear, according to a commentary published alongside the new study by doctors at the University of Turku in Finland.

Whether there could be other external factors is also unclear. For example, the authors note that they couldn’t exclude the potential impact of medications and other treatments that doctors might prescribe to newly diagnosed heart disease patients.

“Teasing out what contributes the most to cognitive decline may be difficult,” Aggarwal said, “as persons with heart disease have multiple medical conditions operating at the same time.

“Medications are a huge factor,” she added – including whether they are taken as prescribed.

Despite the changes in cognitive scores appearing “relatively small,” according to the commentary, the study authors say that “even miniscule differences in cognitive function can result in a substantially increased risk of dementia over several years.” And because no cure exists, they say, finding ways to detect, prevent and intervene early could be our best bet to address the problem, for now.

Aggarwal said there are valuable messages in the study, drawing on her own work at the Cardiology Cognitive Clinic, where her team helps patients address chronic conditions that could take their toll on brain health.

“First step is to encourage patients to tell their physicians about their memory concerns,” Aggarwal said. “Often patients don’t mention this.”

She also encouraged doctors and patients to go over medications and be sure they’re taken as prescribed, to address other possible causes like mood and sleep, and to talk about lifestyle changes that can have a positive effect on overall health.

“What is good for your heart is good for your head,” Aggarwal said.

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WEDNESDAY, Feb. 1 (HealthDay News) -- Heart failure is associated with a loss of gray matter in the brain and a decline in mental processes, according to a new study.

These changes can make it more difficult for heart failure patients to remember and perform health care instructions such as taking the correct medications at the right times, the Australian researchers said.

They conducted memory and other mental performance tests on 35 heart failure patients, 56 patients with ischemic heart disease (which sometimes but not always accompanies heart failure), and 64 healthy people. MRI exams were used to assess gray matter volume in different parts of the brain.

In heart failure, the heart muscle is unable to pump enough oxygen-rich blood to the body, while ischemic heart disease affects the supply of blood to the heart.

Heart failure patients had worse immediate and long-term memory and reaction speeds than healthy people. The brain scans showed that heart failure was associated with losses of gray matter in areas believed to be important for memory, reasoning and planning.

The study appears online Feb. 1 in the European Heart Journal.

"What we found in this study is that both ischemic heart disease and heart failure are associated with a loss of cells in certain brain regions that are important for the modulation of emotions and mental activity -- such a loss is more pronounced in people with heart failure, but can also be seen in people with ischemic heart disease without heart failure," Osvaldo Almeida, director of research at the Western Australia Centre for Health and Ageing in Perth, said in a journal news release.

People with both kinds of heart conditions "show subtle deficits in cognitive abilities" compared to healthy people, Almeida said. However, the researchers could not determine whether people with heart failure performed worse than those with ischemic heart disease.

Almeida said the findings "are consistent with the possibility that patients with heart failure may have trouble following complex management strategies, and, therefore, treatment messages should be simple and clear. Health professionals and patients need to be aware that problems caused by heart disease are not limited to the heart."

-- Robert Preidt

Copyright © 2012 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

QUESTION

In the U.S., 1 in every 4 deaths is caused by heart disease. See Answer

References

SOURCE: European Heart Journal, news release, Jan. 31, 2012

Does congestive heart failure affect the brain?

Introduction. Heart failure (HF) is a common condition, where heart injury leads to reduced pump efficiency of the heart muscle and decreased general blood flow. A common consequence can be insufficient oxygen supply to the entire organism, including the brain.

Can heart failure cause neurological problems?

Abstract—Many patients with congestive heart failure develop neurologic dysfunction. This may take the form of a cardiac encephalopathy that shares clinical features with other metabolic encephalopathies.

How does congestive heart failure affect the neurological system?

Cognitive impairment in patients with HF has been linked to losses in gray matter, (silent) ischemic strokes, decreased cerebral perfusion and higher mortality. Moreover, sleep apnea occurs in more than half of all patients with CHF and reduced EF.

Can CHF cause mental confusion?

Mental confusion is also a symptom of heart failure; it is caused by reduced blood flow to the brain, or a buildup of sodium in the blood.

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