Gooding Holly C, Ning Hongyan, Perak Amanda M, Allen Norrina, Lloyd-Jones Donald, Moore Lynn L, Singer Martha R, de Ferranti Sarah D
Department of Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine, USA.
Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, USA.
Prev Med Rep. 2020 Dec 2;20:101276. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2020.101276. eCollection 2020 Dec.
Adolescence is a critical time for the preservation or loss of cardiovascular health. We aimed to describe trajectories of cardiovascular health in adolescent girls and identify early adolescent factors associated with cardiovascular health in young adulthood. We used data from the National Growth and Health Study, a longitudinal cohort of 2,379 girls followed annually from ages 9-19 years. We classified participants as having ideal, intermediate, or poor levels of the seven cardiovascular health metrics at four developmental stages: early (ages 9-11), middle (ages 12-14), and late (ages 15-17) adolescence, and early young adulthood (ages ≥ 18). We calculated total cardiovascular health scores (range 0-14) at each stage and empirically identified patterns of cardiovascular health trajectories. We examined associations between trajectory group membership and various demographic, behavioral, and physiological factors. Mean cardiovascular health scores declined with age from 10.8 to 9.4 in white girls and 10.3 to 8.9 in black girls; 17% of white girls and 23% of black girls had low cardiovascular health (score < 8) by early young adulthood. We identified five cardiovascular health trajectories: high-stable (14% of participants), high-to-moderate (48%), high-to-low (20%), moderate-stable (10%), and moderate-to-low (8%). Exceeding 14 h per week of television in early adolescence and teen pregnancy were associated with higher odds of being in several less healthy trajectory groups. In conclusion, cardiovascular health declines during adolescence and black-white disparities begin before early adolescence. Key targets for improving cardiovascular health in adolescent girls may include reductions in sedentary behavior and prevention of teen pregnancy.
青春期是心血管健康得以维持或丧失的关键时期。我们旨在描述青春期女孩心血管健康的轨迹,并确定与年轻成年期心血管健康相关的青春期早期因素。我们使用了来自全国生长与健康研究的数据,这是一个对2379名女孩进行纵向队列研究,从9岁至19岁每年进行随访。我们将参与者在四个发育阶段(青春期早期(9至11岁)、中期(12至14岁)、后期(15至17岁)以及青年成年早期(年龄≥18岁))的七种心血管健康指标分为理想、中等或较差水平。我们计算了每个阶段的总心血管健康评分(范围为0至14),并通过实证确定了心血管健康轨迹模式。我们研究了轨迹组成员与各种人口统计学、行为和生理因素之间的关联。白人女孩的平均心血管健康评分随年龄从10.8降至9.4,黑人女孩从10.3降至8.9;到青年成年早期,17%的白人女孩和23%的黑人女孩心血管健康水平较低(评分<8)。我们确定了五种心血管健康轨迹:高稳定型(14%的参与者)、高到中型(48%)、高到低型(20%)、中等稳定型(10%)和中到低型(8%)。青春期早期每周看电视超过14小时以及青少年怀孕与处于几个健康程度较低的轨迹组的较高几率相关。总之,青春期心血管健康下降,且黑白差异在青春期早期之前就已出现。改善青春期女孩心血管健康的关键目标可能包括减少久坐行为和预防青少年怀孕。