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Review of paediatric retinal microvascular changes as a predictor of cardiovascular disease
Author(s) -
Newman Alexander R,
Andrew Nicholas H,
Casson Robert J
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
clinical and experimental ophthalmology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.3
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1442-9071
pISSN - 1442-6404
DOI - 10.1111/ceo.12773
Subject(s) - medicine , retinal , disease , diabetes mellitus , population , vascular disease , blood pressure , cardiology , intensive care medicine , bioinformatics , ophthalmology , endocrinology , environmental health , biology
Recent studies have supported the hypothesis that exposure to established cardiovascular risk factors in early life predisposes to the development of adult cardiovascular disease. Retinal imaging is an emerging technique which facilitates non‐invasive, accurate and reproducible assessment of the retinal microvasculature. The assessment may be in the form of static vascular calibre measurements and assessment of the vascular geometry or dynamic structural and functional assessments. Paediatric retinal microvascular changes are reported in response to elevated blood pressure, type 1 diabetes, increasing adiposity, diet, physical activity, systemic inflammation, metabolic peptides, family history and prenatal factors. The resultant microvascular changes have been linked to sub‐clinical and overt cardiovascular, cerebrovascular and metabolic disease states in the adult population. Still missing however is longitudinal evidence showing the persistence of retinal microvascular alterations into adulthood. Future studies will enable retinal microvascular assessment to further evaluate the pathogenesis of disease states and response to intervention. The data obtained will also aid in expanding the clinical utility of retinal imaging as a cardiovascular risk prediction and monitoring tool and supplement existing recommendations to reduce cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.