A new study found that people who have had a heart attack may be at risk of an accelerated rate of cognitive aging—equivalent to as much as 6 to 13 years.
Researchers found that having a heart attack did not affect those three cognitive measures immediately following the event—rather, it impacted long-term brain health. Cognitive scores of those who had a heart attack accelerated over the next six or so years at a much steeper rate compared to those who did not, with the steepest annual rate of decline seen in older men compared with women.
The researchers analyzed data from six major studies on heart disease and cognition conducted between 1971 and 2019 in the United States. Of the 30,465 people chosen for those studies, none had dementia or experienced a heart attack or stroke before the study began, and all underwent at least one cognitive assessment. The average age of the study participants was 64, of which 56 percent were women.
Out of this sample, 1,033 of the participants had at least one heart attack during the course of the study.
The increase in the annual rate of decline for people who had heart attacks was small, wrote Dr. Eric Smith and Dr. Lisa Silbert in an accompanying editorial. Smith is the medical director of the Cognitive Neurosciences Clinic at the University of Calgary in Alberta, and Silbert is a professor of neurology at Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine in Portland.
However, “it is possible that accruing subclinical decline over years or decades could eventually impair function or decrease cognitive reserve, making the person more vulnerable to the effects of age-related neurodegenerative pathologies,” Smith and Silbert wrote.
The findings “suggest that prevention of [a heart attack] may be important for long-term brain health,” the authors wrote.
“Due to the fact that many people are at risk for having a heart attack, we hope that the results of our study will serve as a wake-up call for people to control vascular risk factors like high blood pressure and elevated cholesterol as soon as they can since we have shown that having a heart attack increases your risk of decreased cognition and memory later on in life,” said Michelle Johansen, an associate professor of neurology at Johns Hopkins Hospital in a statement.
“Cardiac arrest may be reversed if CPR is performed and a defibrillator shocks the heart and restores a normal heart rhythm within a few minutes,” according to the American Heart Association.