Hypertension and diseases of the vascular wall contribute to dementia, including Alzheimer's disease. Central arterial stiffness (CAS) is known to be accelerated by systemic hypertension and may be accompanied by increased stiffness in the cerebral arteries. To study this, we used adult Dahl salt-sensitive (Dahl-S) rats which exhibit increased CAS, indexed by pulse wave velocity (PWV), and hippocampal memory decline as they develop a variable degree of moderate hypertension with age while on a normal salt diet. With this model, we sought to understand the link between CAS in the systemic circulation with a behavioral parameter like anxiety, and with hippocampal perfusion and neuronal density. Dahl-S rats (n=29; Charles River Laboratories) were fed with normal salt diet (0.5% NaCl) until 6 months, when the measurements of systolic blood pressure (SBP), PWV, open field test (OFT) and brain MRI were performed. Central and periphery rearing durations in OFT was conducted as a metric of anxiety. Hippocampal N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA) concentrations, a marker of neuronal density, and blood flow was collected with proton spectroscopy and continuous arterial spin labeling respectively. Six months old males Dahl-S rats displayed hypertension (SBP: 165±16 vs. 142±5 mmHg, 6-mo vs. 3-mo; mean±SD). Linear regression revealed a positive correlation between SBP and PWV (Figure 1). PWV was negatively correlated with cerebral perfusion in the hippocampus (Figure 2). Hippocampal CBF positively correlated with hippocampal NAA (Figure 3). Ratio of central rearing duration to total rearing duration positive correlated with hippocampal blood flow (Figure 4).
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