RATIONALE TO STUDY THE EARLY NATURAL-HISTORY OF HEART-DISEASE - THE BOGALUSA HEART-STUDY

Citation
Gs. Berenson et al., RATIONALE TO STUDY THE EARLY NATURAL-HISTORY OF HEART-DISEASE - THE BOGALUSA HEART-STUDY, The American journal of the medical sciences, 310, 1995, pp. 22-28
Citations number
41
Categorie Soggetti
Medicine, General & Internal
ISSN journal
00029629
Volume
310
Year of publication
1995
Supplement
1
Pages
22 - 28
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-9629(1995)310:<22:RTSTEN>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
The Bogalusa Heart Study now establishes that precursors of adult card iovascular diseases begin in childhood. The dearest evidence comes fro m autopsy studies that show coronary atherosclerotic lesions occur in early life and are strongly associated with very-low-density lipoprote in cholesterol, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and obesity, an d have an inverse relationship with high-density lipoprotein cholester ol. Observations of cardiovascular risk factors span a period of life from birth to 31 years of age, and longitudinal studies span a 15-year period. Risk factor variables tend to persist over time, ''track.'' A lthough tracking is best for height and weight, low-density lipoprotei n cholesterol and serum total cholesterol track at a high order; blood pressure tends to track at a lower order. Obesity and body fatness ha ve an adverse influence on risk factors in children, just as noted in adults, with central obesity becoming more obvious after puberty, and having a greater adverse effect on risk factors. The emergence of abno rmal levels of risk factors by adult criteria begins to occur in young adults, and is not evident in childhood. Retrospective studies, inter estingly, for obesity, higher blood pressure, and dyslipidemia reveal evidence of their presence already in childhood. These findings have s trong implications for undertaking prevention in early life.