Early life cardiovascular disease risk factors, such as lower birth weight, childhood hypertension, and obesity, are associated with structural changes in the retinal microvasculature.
Systematic Review
Systematic review of publications assessing quantitative retinal vascular changes and cardiovascular disease risk factors in children and adolescents.
Early life cardiovascular disease risk factors
Retinal vascular changes
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality globally. In recent years, studies have shown that the origins of CVD may be traced to vascular and metabolic processes in early life. Retinal vascular imaging is a new technology that allows detailed non-invasive in vivo assessment and monitoring of the microvasculature. In this systematic review, we described the application of retinal vascular imaging in children and adolescents, and we examined the use of retinal vascular imaging in understanding CVD risk in early life. We reviewed all publications with quantitative retinal vascular assessment in two databases: PubMed and Scopus. Early life CVD risk factors were classified into four groups: birth risk factors, environmental risk factors, systemic risk factors and conditions linked to future CVD development. Retinal vascular changes were associated with lower birth weight, shorter gestational age, low-fibre and high-sugar diet, lesser physical activity, parental hypertension history, childhood hypertension, childhood overweight/obesity, childhood depression/anxiety and childhood type 1 diabetes mellitus. In summary, there is increasing evidence supporting the view that structural changes in the retinal microvasculature are associated with CVD risk factors in early life. Thus, the retina is a useful site for pre-clinical assessment of microvascular processes that may underlie the future development of CVD in adulthood.
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Li et al. (Mon,) conducted a systematic review in Cardiovascular disease risk. Early life cardiovascular disease risk factors was evaluated on Retinal vascular changes. Early life cardiovascular disease risk factors, such as lower birth weight, childhood hypertension, and obesity, are associated with structural changes in the retinal microvasculature.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a22b8dab95e3d1e3614d498 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1113/jp270947
Ling‐Jun Li
Agency for Science, Technology and Research
M. Kamran Ikram
Wannan Medical College
Tien Yin Wong
National University of Singapore
The Journal of Physiology
National University of Singapore
Duke-NUS Medical School
Singapore Eye Research Institute
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