• JAMA · Feb 1999

    Multicenter Study

    Prevalence and extent of atherosclerosis in adolescents and young adults: implications for prevention from the Pathobiological Determinants of Atherosclerosis in Youth Study.

    • J P Strong, G T Malcom, C A McMahan, R E Tracy, W P Newman, E E Herderick, and J F Cornhill.
    • Department of Pathology, Louisiana State University Medical Center, New Orleans 70112, USA. jstron@lsumc.edu
    • JAMA. 1999 Feb 24; 281 (8): 727-35.

    ContextAtherosclerosis, the underlying cause of coronary heart disease, has been shown to be present even in young adults.ObjectiveTo document the extent and severity of atherosclerosis in adolescents and young adults in the United States.Design And SettingThe Pathobiological Determinants of Atherosclerosis in Youth Study, a multi-institutional autopsy study conducted in US medical centers. Subjects A total of 2876 study subjects, between 15 and 34 years old, black and white, men and women, who died of external causes and underwent autopsy between June 1, 1987, and August 31, 1994.Main Outcome MeasuresExtent, prevalence, and topography of atherosclerotic lesions.ResultsIntimal lesions appeared in all the aortas and more than half of the right coronary arteries of the youngest age group (15-19 years) and increased in prevalence and extent with age through the oldest age group (30-34 years). Fatty streaks were more extensive in black subjects than in white subjects, but raised lesions did not differ between blacks and whites. Raised lesions in the aortas of women and men were similar, but raised lesions in the right coronary arteries of women were less than those of men. The prevalence of total lesions was lower in the right coronary artery than in the aorta, but the proportion of raised lesions among total lesions was higher in the right coronary artery than in the aorta.ConclusionsAtherosclerosis begins in youth. Fatty streaks and clinically significant raised lesions increase rapidly in prevalence and extent during the 15- to 34-year age span. Primary prevention of atherosclerosis, as contrasted with primary prevention of clinically manifest atherosclerotic disease, must begin in childhood or adolescence.

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