Journal article
Infectious diseases are associated with carotid intima media thickness in adolescence.
-
Dratva J
Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, CH, Socinstrasse 57, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland; University of Basel, CH, Petersplatz 1, CH-4031 Basel, Switzerland. Electronic address: julia.dratva@unibas.ch.
-
Caviezel S
Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, CH, Socinstrasse 57, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland; University of Basel, CH, Petersplatz 1, CH-4031 Basel, Switzerland; Department for Sport, Exercise and Health, Division Sports and Exercise Medicine, University of Basel, St. Jakob-Arena, Brüglingen 33, CH-4052 Basel, Switzerland.
-
Schaffner E
Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, CH, Socinstrasse 57, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland; University of Basel, CH, Petersplatz 1, CH-4031 Basel, Switzerland.
-
Bettschart R
Lungenpraxis Hirslanden Klinik Aarau, Schanzweg 7, CH-5000 Aarau, Switzerland.
-
Kuenzli N
Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, CH, Socinstrasse 57, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland; University of Basel, CH, Petersplatz 1, CH-4031 Basel, Switzerland.
-
Schindler C
Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, CH, Socinstrasse 57, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland; University of Basel, CH, Petersplatz 1, CH-4031 Basel, Switzerland.
-
Schmidt-Trucksäss A
Department for Sport, Exercise and Health, Division Sports and Exercise Medicine, University of Basel, St. Jakob-Arena, Brüglingen 33, CH-4052 Basel, Switzerland.
-
Stolz D
Universitätsspital, Pneumologie, Basel CH, Petersgraben 4, CH-4031 Basel, Switzerland.
-
Zemp E
Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, CH, Socinstrasse 57, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland; University of Basel, CH, Petersplatz 1, CH-4031 Basel, Switzerland.
-
Probst-Hensch N
Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, CH, Socinstrasse 57, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland; University of Basel, CH, Petersplatz 1, CH-4031 Basel, Switzerland.
Show more…
English
OBJECTIVE
Inflammatory risk factors in childhood, e.g. obesity, impact on carotid artery intima media thickness (CIMT), an early indicator of atherosclerosis. Little is known on potential infectious origins in childhood. We investigated the association between number of reported different childhood infectious diseases and CIMT in adolescence.
STUDY DESIGN
288 SAPALDIA offspring (8-21years) underwent a clinical examination in 2010-2011: anthropometry, blood pressure, CIMT, blood draw (cardiovascular biomarkers, cotinine). Offspring and parents gave information on individuals' and family health, child's vaccination status, infectious diseases and other early life factors. Life-time prevalence of bronchitis, pneumonia, tonsillitis, otitis, mononucleosis, meningitis, appendicitis, and scarlet fever were investigated, separately, and as cumulative infectious disease score. Multilevel adjusted linear regression analysis on the association between subjects' CIMT average and infectious diseases score was performed, stratifying by sex.
RESULTS
Youth (mean age 14.8 yrs; 53% female) reported on average 1.3 of the listed infectious diseases; 22% boys and 15% girls reported ≥3 infectious diseases (p = 0.136). Two-thirds were vaccinated according to recommendations (boys 56%, girls 61.5%, p = 0.567). Sex-stratified analyses yielded significantly increased CIMT in boys with ≥3 infectious diseases vs. none (0.046 mm, 95%CI 0.024; 0.068). In girls, the effect was of same direction but statistically non-significant (0.011 mm, 95%CI -0.015; 0.036).
CONCLUSION
The SAPALDIA Youth study complements current evidence on infectious origins of atherosclerosis in adults. The larger effects observed in boys may relate to a higher vulnerability of the vasculature and/or to infectious pathogens. Our data are suggestive of an early impact of childhood infectious diseases on vascular health.
-
Language
-
-
Open access status
-
closed
-
Identifiers
-
-
Persistent URL
-
https://folia.unifr.ch/global/documents/124499
Statistics
Document views: 26
File downloads: