Early determinants of cardiovascular risk in the young: Two Dutch cohorts

Cardiovascular disease is the major cause of death in westernized societies, responsible for 35.5% of the total mortality in The Netherlands. Part of the current decline in cardiovascular mortality has been attributed to primary prevention in adults. However, as the roots of cardiovascular disease are in early life, the possibilities for prevention in childhood may be considered. To study early cardiovascular determinants and possible prevention stategies the Atherosclerosis Risk in Young Adults (ARYA) study was designed, consisting of more than 1000 young adults of around 30 years of age sele... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Vos, Lydia Esther
Dokumenttyp: Dissertation
Erscheinungsdatum: 2003
Schlagwörter: Geneeskunde / IGF-I genotype / birth weight / blood pressure / body size / predict / cardiovascular risk / intima media thickness / pulse wave velocity / adolescent / young adult
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29456529
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/461

Cardiovascular disease is the major cause of death in westernized societies, responsible for 35.5% of the total mortality in The Netherlands. Part of the current decline in cardiovascular mortality has been attributed to primary prevention in adults. However, as the roots of cardiovascular disease are in early life, the possibilities for prevention in childhood may be considered. To study early cardiovascular determinants and possible prevention stategies the Atherosclerosis Risk in Young Adults (ARYA) study was designed, consisting of more than 1000 young adults of around 30 years of age selected from the general population. Routine data at birth, childhood and adolescence of 750 subjects was collected from school health records. Of 262 subjects biannual and standardized measurements of cardiovascular risk factors during adolescence were collected by the Municipal Health Service. Recently, cardiovascular risk factors and vascular damage were remeasured. One of the possible early cardiovascular determinants is low birth weight, a concept known as the "fetal origins hypothesis" . Our data show that homozygous carriers of a functional polymorphism in the promoter region of the IGF-I gene show a increased cardiovascular risk factor levels at young age but not with birth weight. Furthermore, we found that the first born children of non-carrier parents weighed on average 584 gram less than homozygous parents, indicating that the IGF-I gene may be related to the fetal growth of their newborns. Our further analyses support the fetal origins hypothesis, as an average decrease in birth weight (540 gram) was associated with one excess coronary heart disease event in 1000 subjects. Also, low birth weight was associated with increased blood pressure, but restricted to those with high attained relative body weights. Next, we observed similar to others that an unfavorable intra-uterine environment may be less important for future hypertension than an excess gain in body weight in later life. Postmortem studies showed that the ...