<p><b><i>Background:</i></b> Hemodynamic balance in the heart-brain axis
is increasingly recognized as a crucial factor in maintaining
functional and structural integrity of the brain and thereby cognitive
functioning. Patients with heart failure (HF), carotid occlusive disease
(COD), and vascular cognitive impairment (VCI) present themselves with
complaints attributed to specific parts of the heart-brain axis, but
hemodynamic changes often go beyond the part of the axis for which they
primarily seek medical advice. The Heart-Brain Study hypothesizes that
the hemodynamic status of the heart and the brain is an important but
underestimated cause of VCI. We investigate this by studying to what
extent hemodynamic changes contribute to VCI and what the mechanisms
involved are. Here, we provide an overview of the design and protocol. <b><i>Methods:</i></b>
The Heart-Brain Study is a multicenter cohort study with a follow-up
measurement after 2 years among 645 participants (175 VCI, 175 COD, 175
HF, and 120 controls). Enrollment criteria are the following: 1 of the 3
diseases diagnosed according to current guidelines, age ≥50 years, no
magnetic resonance contraindications, ability to undergo cognitive
testing, and independence in daily life. A core clinical dataset is
collected including sociodemographic factors, cardiovascular risk
factors, detailed neurologic, cardiac, and medical history, medication,
and a physical examination. In addition, we perform standardized
neuropsychological testing, cardiac, vascular and brain MRI, and blood
sampling. In subsets of participants we assess Alzheimer biomarkers in
cerebrospinal fluid, and assess echocardiography and 24-hour blood
pressure monitoring. Follow-up measurements after 2 years include
neuropsychological testing, brain MRI, and blood samples for all
participants. We use centralized state-of-the-art storage platforms for
clinical and imaging data. Imaging data are processed centrally with
automated standardized pipelines. <b><i>Results and Conclusions:</i></b>
The Heart-Brain Study investigates relationships between
(cardio-)vascular factors, the hemodynamic status of the heart and the
brain, and cognitive impairment. By studying the complete heart-brain
axis in patient groups that represent components of this axis, we have
the opportunity to assess a combination of clinical and subclinical
manifestations of disorders of the heart, vascular system and brain,
with hemodynamic status as a possible binding factor.</p