Abstract

A physically active lifestyle can prevent cardiovascular disease. Exercise intervention studies in children and adolescents that aim to increase physical activity have resulted in reduced vascular wall thickening and improve cardiovascular function. Here we review the literature that explores the correlations between physical activity, health-related physical fitness, and exercise interventions with various measures of vascular structure and function in children and adolescents. While several of these studies identified improvements in vascular structure in response to physical activity, these associations were limited to studies that relied on questionnaires. Of concern, these findings were not replicated in studies featuring quantitative assessment of physical activity with accelerometers. Half of the studies reviewed reported improved vascular function with increased physical activity, with the type of vascular measurement and the way physical activity was assessed having an influence on the reported relationships. Similary, most of the studies identified in the literature report a beneficial association of health-related physical fitness with vascular structure and function. Overall, it was difficult to compare the results of these studies to one another as different methodologies were used to measure both, health-related physical fitness and vascular function. Likewise, exercise interventions may reduce both arterial wall thickness and increased vascular stiffness in pediatric populations at risk, but the impact clearly depends on the duration of the intervention and varies depending on the target groups. We identified only one study that examined vascular structure and function in young athletes, a group of particular interest with respect to understanding of cardiovascular adaptation to exercise. In conclusion, future studies will be needed that address the use of wall:diameter or wall:lumen-ratio as part of the evaluation of arterial wall thickness. Furthermore, it will be critical to introduce specific and quantitative measurements of physical activity, as intensity and duration of participation likely influence the effectiveness of exercise interventions.

Highlights

  • Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is currently the leading cause of death worldwide; in 2030, CVD may be the major underlying factor in 22.2 million deaths per year [1]

  • Arteries of fit children and adolescents may undergo adaptation to exercise, a process which may have an impact on smooth muscle cells in the vascular media; this adaptation may explain the positive relationship of Carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) (cIMT) to cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) observed by Weberruss et al [21]

  • The results indicate the changes in cIMT that result from exercise interventions were small to moderate (g = −0.306; 95% CI :−0.540 to −0.072, p = 0.011) with higher impact achieved in response to the longer interventions

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is currently the leading cause of death worldwide; in 2030, CVD may be the major underlying factor in 22.2 million deaths per year [1]. Vascular stiffness can be measured with ultrasound, oscillometric devices, photoplethysmography, and/or applanation tonometry applied to the aorta, femoral, brachial or carotid arteries Parameters measured with this devices include compliance, distensibility, stiffness index, reflection index, elastic modulus, augmentation index (AI), and PWV. Among the studies that made use of accelerometers, Ried-Larsen et al [20, 37] reported no correlation between MVPA or vigorous PA (VPA) and cIMT in a study of 8to-10-year old Danish children; analogous results were obtained from adolescents with a mean age of 15.6 ± 0.4 years. Parameters relating to vascular stiffness were not associated with time spent in MVPA in a daily basis and VPA in children and adolescents [20]. Among Portuguese children between the ages of 11 and 13 years, cIMT was inversely associated with CRF independent of Frontiers in Pediatrics | www.frontiersin.org

Results
12–14 Questionnaire Applanation tonometry
9–10 Ergometer test Applanation tonometry
DMI children
CONCLUSION
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