Those with low scores on a test of executive function, the higher-level thinking skills used to reason, problem solve and plan, may be at higher risk of heart attack or stroke, researchers said.
"These results show that heart and brain function are more closely related than appearances would suggest," said study author Behnam Sabayan, of Leiden University Medical Centre in Leiden, the Netherlands.
"While these results might not have immediate clinical translation, they emphasise that assessment of cognitive function should be part of the evaluation of future cardiovascular risk," he said.
Four tests were used to evaluate the participants' high-level thinking skills at the beginning of the study. The participants were then placed in groups of "low," "medium" and "high" based on the results.
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The participants were then followed for an average of three years to see who developed heart attacks or strokes.
People in the lowest group of executive function thinking skills were 85 per cent more likely to have a heart attack than those in the highest group.
A total of 176 of the 1,309 people with low scores had heart attacks, compared with 93 of the 1,308 people with high scores, which translates to a rate of 44 heart attacks per 1,000 person-years for people with low scores compared with 22 heart attacks per 1,000 person-years for people with high scores.
"Performance on tests of thinking and memory are a measure of brain health. Lower scores on thinking tests indicate worse brain functioning," said Sabayan.
"Worse brain functioning in particular in executive function could reflect disease of the brain vascular supply, which in turn would predict, as it did, a higher likelihood of stroke," he said.
"And, since blood vessel disease in the brain is closely related to blood vessel disease in the heart, that's why low test scores also predicted a greater risk of heart attacks," Sabayan added.