B3665 - Early life exposure to cardiovascular risk factors and cerebral structure and function in young adults - 02/12/2020
Certain behavioural (e.g. diet, smoking, physical activity) and physiological (e.g. obesity, cholesterol, glycaemic control, blood pressure) risk factors have long been known to increase risk of atherosclerotic CVD in later life. Although clinical events rarely occur prior to middle-age, our group have previously shown that early signs of damage to the vasculature can be detectable from as early as childhood (Charakida et al 2012 JACC; Dangardt et al 2019 Lancet Child and Adolescent Health; Chiesa et al JACC Imaging 2019), and that cumulative exposure to this damage across the lifespan likely represents one of the biggest causes of later-life events.
Intriguingly, recent research strongly suggests that these modifiable health behaviours and risk factors may also contribute to another of the world's most pressing global health crises – dementia. A wealth of recent research supports the concept that the development and progression of cognitive decline and eventual dementia can be slowed or perhaps even prevented by addressing various risk factors more commonly linked to CVD (Livingstone et al 2020 Lancet). The implementation of early-life prevention strategies to improve heart health may therefore also provide dual benefits for long-term brain health.
Our group and others have recently contributed to accumulating evidence suggesting that it is exposure to these CV risk factors earlier in the lifespan which appear to relate most strongly to risk of cerebral (i.e. brain) disease risk in later life. These findings suggest that although dementia diagnoses are almost exclusively made in older age, they may in fact represent the end result of cumulative damage to brain tissues which have been sustained over decades previously. However, how early this damage starts and what factors are responsible for its appearance is currently unknown, as very few populations are available in which detailed brain scans have been carried out on a young population with wide-ranging CVD risk factors.