TY - JOUR
T1 - Environmental Exposures and Pediatric Cardiology
T2 - A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association
AU - Zachariah, Justin P.
AU - Jone, Pei Ni
AU - Agbaje, Andrew O.
AU - Ryan, Heather H.
AU - Trasande, Leonardo
AU - Perng, Wei
AU - Farzan, Shohreh F.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Heart Association, Inc.
PY - 2024/5/14
Y1 - 2024/5/14
N2 - Environmental toxicants and pollutants are causes of adverse health consequences, including well-established associations between environmental exposures and cardiovascular diseases. Environmental degradation is widely prevalent and has a long latency period between exposure and health outcome, potentially placing a large number of individuals at risk of these health consequences. Emerging evidence suggests that environmental exposures in early life may be key risk factors for cardiovascular conditions across the life span. Children are a particularly sensitive population for the detrimental effects of environmental toxicants and pollutants given the long-term cumulative effects of early-life exposures on health outcomes, including congenital heart disease, acquired cardiac diseases, and accumulation of cardiovascular disease risk factors. This scientific statement highlights representative examples for each of these cardiovascular disease subtypes and their determinants, focusing specifically on the associations between climate change and congenital heart disease, airborne particulate matter and Kawasaki disease, blood lead levels and blood pressure, and endocrine-disrupting chemicals with cardiometabolic risk factors. Because children are particularly dependent on their caregivers to address their health concerns, this scientific statement highlights the need for clinicians, research scientists, and policymakers to focus more on the linkages of environmental exposures with cardiovascular conditions in children and adolescents.
AB - Environmental toxicants and pollutants are causes of adverse health consequences, including well-established associations between environmental exposures and cardiovascular diseases. Environmental degradation is widely prevalent and has a long latency period between exposure and health outcome, potentially placing a large number of individuals at risk of these health consequences. Emerging evidence suggests that environmental exposures in early life may be key risk factors for cardiovascular conditions across the life span. Children are a particularly sensitive population for the detrimental effects of environmental toxicants and pollutants given the long-term cumulative effects of early-life exposures on health outcomes, including congenital heart disease, acquired cardiac diseases, and accumulation of cardiovascular disease risk factors. This scientific statement highlights representative examples for each of these cardiovascular disease subtypes and their determinants, focusing specifically on the associations between climate change and congenital heart disease, airborne particulate matter and Kawasaki disease, blood lead levels and blood pressure, and endocrine-disrupting chemicals with cardiometabolic risk factors. Because children are particularly dependent on their caregivers to address their health concerns, this scientific statement highlights the need for clinicians, research scientists, and policymakers to focus more on the linkages of environmental exposures with cardiovascular conditions in children and adolescents.
KW - AHA Scientific Statements
KW - endocrine disruptors
KW - environmental pollutants
KW - heart defects, congenital
KW - heart disease risk factors
KW - metals, heavy
KW - mucocutaneous lymph node syndrome
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85193100667&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85193100667&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1161/CIR.0000000000001234
DO - 10.1161/CIR.0000000000001234
M3 - Review article
C2 - 38618723
AN - SCOPUS:85193100667
SN - 0009-7322
VL - 149
SP - E1165-E1175
JO - Circulation
JF - Circulation
IS - 20
ER -