Mouse models of cerebral injury and cognitive impairment in hypertension

Published on July 19, 2023

Imagine you’re trying to understand how high blood pressure affects different parts of the body, like the heart, blood vessels, and kidneys. Well, scientists have developed various models to study this. But now they’re also interested in how hypertension affects the brain and cognition. That’s why they’re investigating different genetic, pharmacological, and surgical models that can mimic cognitive impairment caused by hypertension in mice. By utilizing these models, researchers hope to gain insight into the complex problem of cognitive decline due to vascular issues. It’s like peering through a microscope to discover tiny details that can help solve a big puzzle! So grab your lab coat and dive into this review that explains these mouse models in detail and highlights their potential to advance our understanding of hypertension-related cognitive loss.

Hypertension is a major risk factor for dementia, including both vascular and neurodegenerative etiologies. With the original aim of studying the effect of blood pressure elevation on canonical target organs of hypertension as the heart, the vasculature or the kidneys, several experimental models of hypertension have sprouted during the years. With the more recent interest of understanding the cerebral injury burden caused by hypertension, it is worth understanding how the main models of hypertension or localized cerebral hypertension stand in the field of hypertension-induced cerebral injury and cognitive impairment. With this review we will report main genetic, pharmacological and surgical models of cognitive impairment induced by hypertension, summarizing how each specific category and model can improve our understanding of the complex phenomenon of cognitive loss of vascular etiology.

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