PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Supportive, stable caregiving in childhood protects heart health in adulthood

2024-01-23
(Press-News.org) Previous research has established that childhood experience with abuse, neglect, and substance use in the home can worsen a person’s heart health throughout their life. New research, however, now shows that receiving warmth from a caregiver during childhood protects cardiovascular health later in life, according to a study led by NYU Grossman School of Medicine and The Ohio State University Wexler Medical Center.

The findings, published online January 23, 2024 in the journal Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, are the first to frame adversity and protective factors across a large group when it comes to cardiovascular health over time, the researchers say. Given that cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains the leading cause of death in the United States, with Black adults more than twice as likely to die from CVD than White adults, the study cohort included individuals identifying as Black and White.

“We know that mitigating risk factors for cardiovascular disease must begin in childhood,” said Robin Ortiz, M.D., professor in the Departments of Pediatrics and Population Health at NYU Langone, and the study’s lead author and core faculty member at the Institute for Excellence in Health Equity. “At the same time, our findings show that adversity in early childhood does not equal destiny. While adverse childhood family environments were associated with lower odds of cardiovascular health in adulthood, our findings suggest that supportive and, importantly, stable caregiving may have a stronger influence on later heart health than early adversity.”

How the Study Was Conducted

The team of researchers analyzed a sample of more than 2000 enrollees in the CARDIA study, a long-term study of cardiovascular disease risk beginning in young adulthood which has been following more than 5,000 Black and White adults for over 35 years to help researchers understand which early life factors raise the risk of CVD later in life.

The investigators analyzed data from this group at baseline, at which time the cohort averaged 25 years of age, and data that followed up at seven and 20 year intervals. Using scales measuring adversity in childhood including child abuse and caregiver warmth, they found that each additional unit score of overall family environment adversity and then child abuse specifically, was associated with a 3.6 and 12.8 percent lower odds of ideal cardiovascular health (CVH), respectively, while each additional unit score of caregiver warmth, specifically, was associated with 11.7 percent higher odds of cardiovascular health. CVH score was rated according to a scale of seven health metrics defined by the American Heart Association, including diet, smoking, physical activity, weight, lipids, blood pressure and fasting glucose.

In what appeared perhaps counterintuitive to the research team, exposure to the greatest amount of caregiver warmth and greatest amount of child abuse, taken together, was associated with the lowest CVH scores. Meanwhile, exposure to the greatest amount of caregiver warmth and lowest amount of child abuse, taken together, was associated with the highest CVH scores. All findings remained consistent over 20 years of follow-up.

Exposure to caregiver warmth in childhood was associated with greatest CVH (highest scores) in adults. However, what was most unique about the findings, according to Ortiz, was that of all adults with high levels of child abuse exposure, those who also reported high levels of caregiver warmth exposure had lower CVH scores than those with high child abuse but low levels of caregiver warmth exposure. This, Ortiz interprets, suggests that while having a supportive caregiver is crucial to a life course of health, the stability and consistency of that support and warmth in childhood is just as important of a predictor of later life CVH.

According to Ortiz, individuals who have experienced both abuse and warmth in childhood might face the inability to predict the presence of support overall in their childhood environment. Individuals who are exposed to only or mostly caregiver warmth (and no, or limited abuse) are able to predict and ultimately depend on a sense of support, safety, and perhaps, physiological balance. The findings further suggest that an unpredictable or unstable relational environment might be associated with poor health later in life, while stable or predictable support in childhood may optimize physiology and behavior to result in greater CVH later in life.

When stratifying the results by income in adulthood, the findings were more nuanced. The investigators found that the relationship between childhood adversity and CVH only stood out among those who had higher socioeconomic levels in adulthood (greater than $35,000 annually). Adverse family environments were associated with lower CVH across income levels between $35,000 to $74,000 annually, as well as with income greater than $75,000 annually, but no significant relationship between CVH and annual income less than $25,000 or between $25,00 to $34,000.  

Prior studies in the field have shown that once in adulthood, explained Ortiz, it may be more difficult for people facing economic challenges to attain high levels of CVH for those with and without childhood adversity as measured in this study.  “However, for individuals in adulthood right now with higher incomes, we are able to see this relationship emerge showing how important those early environmental risk factors really are,” she said.

The hope, says Ortiz, is that this study offers insight into how supporting healthy, both supportive and stable, caregiving relationships in childhood can offer greater attainment of CVH at a population level. Future research will also focus more heavily on the complex relationship between CVH and economic hardship at different points of the life course.  

“We have to address healthy caregiver relationships as well as address socioeconomic hardship,” said Ortiz. “We need policies and programs that support both caregivers and children in order to achieve greater health equity.”

Funding for the study was provided by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute in collaboration with numerous institutions supporting The CARDIA Study, as well as funding in support of authors’ time including the Endocrine Society, the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Harold Amos Medical Faculty Development Program, and the National Institute on Aging.

In addition to Ortiz, another NYU Langone investigator involved in the study is Gbenga Ogedegbe, MD, MPH. Other researchers include senior author Joshua J. Joseph, MD, MPH, Songzhu Zhao, MS, and David Brock, PHD, Ohio University State College of Medicine; Kiarri N. Kershaw, PhD, MPH, Northwestern University; David Kline, PhD, Wake Forest University School of Medicine; Sara Jaffee, PhD, University of Pennsylvania; Sherita H. Golden, MD, MHS, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine; Judith Carroll, PhD, and Teresa E. Seeman, PhD, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles.

Media Inquiries:
Sasha Walek
646-501-3873
sasha.walek@nyulangone.org

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Hopp Children's Cancer Center Heidelberg launches development cooperation to provide children worldwide with modern cancer diagnostics

Hopp Childrens Cancer Center Heidelberg launches development cooperation to provide children worldwide with modern cancer diagnostics
2024-01-23
Worldwide, 40 percent of all children with cancer die from their disease*. In countries like Germany, which are among the global leaders in healthcare, 20 percent of all children with cancer do not survive their disease. "Particularly in low-income countries, there is a lack of resources for training experts, for example specialized pathologists, and thus a lack of precise diagnostics to successfully treat children and adolescents," emphasizes Stefan Pfister, director at the Hopp Children's Cancer Center Heidelberg (KiTZ), department head ...

Ants help reveal why sourcing different plants for eco fuels is crucial for biodiversity

2024-01-23
Despite being a renewable energy source, the use of biofuel is controversial, as growing few, highly productive crops for fuel can lead to biodiversity loss in the cropping systems where biomass is produced. A cropping system refers to the crops, their sequence, and the management practices on a given field. Now, researchers in the US have compared ant communities in different types of bioenergy cropping systems to better understand how these systems shape biotic communities and their functions. The results were published in Frontiers ...

Quickly and easily predict emerging contaminant concentrations in wastewater with artificial intelligence

Quickly and easily predict emerging contaminant concentrations in wastewater with artificial intelligence
2024-01-23
The global consumption of pharmaceuticals is growing rapidly every year, reaching 4 billion doses in 2020. As more and more pharmaceuticals are metabolized by the human body and enter sewage and wastewater treatment plants, the amount and types of trace substances found in them are also increasing. When these trace substances enter rivers and oceans and are used as water sources, they can have harmful effects on the environment and human health, including carcinogenesis and endocrine disruption. Therefore, technologies are needed to quickly ...

The cause of recent cold waves over East Asia and North America was in the mid-latitude ocean fronts

The cause of recent cold waves over East Asia and North America was in the mid-latitude ocean fronts
2024-01-23
If the world is warming, why are our winters getting colder? Indeed, East Asia and North America have experienced frequent extreme weather events since the 2000s that defy average climate change projections. Many experts have blamed Arctic warming and a weakening jet stream due to declining Arctic sea ice, but climate model experiments have not adequately demonstrated their validity. The massive power outage in Texas in February 2021 was caused by an unusual cold snap, and climate models are needed to accurately predict the risk of extreme weather events in order to prevent massive socioeconomic damage. In particular, climate technology leaders have ...

Breaking through the limits of a single fiber laser amplifier - Coherent Beam Combination

Breaking through the limits of a single fiber laser amplifier - Coherent Beam Combination
2024-01-23
High-power, high-energy ultrafast fiber lasers are indispensable tools in various fields, from basic and applied science research to industrial processing. However, due to thermal effects, nonlinear effects, there is always a limit to the power/energy expansion of a single fiber laser amplifier. Coherent Beam Combination (CBC) technology is an effective strategy to break through the limits of a single fiber laser amplifier and further achieve power/energy scaling. Under the conditions of mutual coherence and stable phase relationship, multiple laser beams can be superimposed and mutually interfere with each other. This approach allows for an ...

Motion of satellite galaxies suggests younger universe

Motion of satellite galaxies suggests younger universe
2024-01-23
In standard cosmological models, the formation of cosmological structures begins with the emergence of small structures, which subsequently undergo hierarchical merging, leading to the formation of larger systems. As the Universe ages, massive galaxy groups and clusters, being the largest systems, tend to increase in mass and reach a more dynamically relaxed state. The motions of satellite galaxies around these groups and clusters provide valuable insights into their assembly status. The observations of such motion offer crucial clues about the age of the Universe. By using public data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), a research team led by Prof. GUO ...

Mapping local quality at super-resolution scale

Mapping local quality at super-resolution scale
2024-01-23
Super-resolution (SR) fluorescence microscopy, through the use of fluorescent probes and specific excitation and emission procedures, surpasses the diffraction limit of resolution (200~300 nm) that was once a barrier. Most SR techniques are heavily reliant on image calculations and processing to retrieve SR information. However, factors such as fluorophores photophysics, sample's chemical environment, and optical setup situations can cause noise and distortions in raw images, potentially impacting the final ...

NIL Metalens array enabling next-generation true-3D near-eye displays

NIL Metalens array enabling next-generation true-3D near-eye displays
2024-01-23
Integral imaging (II) display is one of the most promising near-eye displays (NEDs) due to its compact volume, full parallax, convenient full-color display, and, more importantly, true-3D and more realistic depth perception from eliminating the vergence-accommodation conflict (VAC). However, II displays based on the conventional optical architecture, such as microlens arrays, are limited in resolution, field of view, depth of field, etc. As micro-displays have increasingly higher pixel densities, conventional optical architecture is inadequate in ...

Genetic discovery reveals who can benefit from preterm birth therapy

2024-01-23
A UC San Francisco-led study has for the first time identified genetic variants that predict whether patients will respond to treatment for preterm birth, a condition that affects one in 10 infants born in the United States.  The findings are critical because no medication is available in the U.S. to treat preterm birth.  Last year, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) pulled the only approved therapy to help prevent this condition, a synthetic form of progesterone sold under the brand name Makena, from the market, citing ineffectiveness.  The new research found that pregnant individuals with high levels of mutations in certain genes ...

Strong links found between Long COVID and ME/CFS: Otago study

Strong links found between Long COVID and ME/CFS: Otago study
2024-01-23
People suffering from Long COVID or Myalgic Encephalomyelitis /Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) could benefit from a coordinated treatment strategy, a new University of Otago study has found. The pilot study, published in Scientific Reports, a Nature journal, has confirmed what researchers have suspected for some time: the two conditions are closely related. Lead author Emeritus Professor Warren Tate says the research - the first comparative molecular study of the immune cell proteins of both conditions - “strongly affirms” the link between the two. “This means information from study of the pathophysiology ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Morton Arboretum tree root scientist recognized as top-cited researcher for second straight year

Scientists show electrical stimulation could be key to healthy tendons

University Hospitals only health system in northeast Ohio offering FDA-approved KISUNLA™ for treatment of Alzheimer’s disease

Real-world chemists are more diverse than generative AI images suggest

Curiosity, images, and scientific exploration

Nature publishes collection of papers advancing the human cell atlas, with research supported by CZI

Researchers catalog the microbiome of US rivers

Mapping 1.6 million gut cells to find new ways treat disease

First molecule identified that promotes gut healing while inhibiting tumour progression

Trends in postpartum depression by race, ethnicity, and prepregnancy BMI

Short-term and long-term mortality risk after preterm birth

Thanksgiving special: dinosaur drumsticks and the story of the turkey trot

Superior photosynthesis abilities of some plants could hold key to climate-resilient crops

Human immune system is ‘ready to go’ long before birth

R sounds are rough, and L sounds are smooth, according to cross-cultural study

Healthy women have cells that resemble breast cancer, study finds

Cancer-like mutations in healthy cells point to origins of breast cancer

Preterm birth associated with increased mortality risk into adulthood, study finds

Genome Research publishes a Special Issue on Long-read DNA and RNA Sequencing Applications in Biology and Medicine

Dementia risk prediction: Zero-minute assessment at less than a dollar cost

Children’s Hospital Colorado Heart Institute earns national recognition for excellence in cardiomyopathy care

Trial shows alcohol-mimicking medication can give laryngeal dystonia patients back their voice

Cigarette smoke alters microbiota, aggravates flu severity

Landmark study reveals over 100,000 American youth living with inflammatory bowel disease

Diverse diets of civets in Borneo rainforest allow them to live in same geographical area

Virtual reality could be gamechanger in police-civilian crisis encounters

Recycled pacemakers function as well as new devices, international study suggests

Researchers eliminate the gritty mouth feel: How to make it easier to eat fiber-rich foods

An innovative antibiotic for drug-resistant bacteria

Garden produce grown near Fayetteville works fluorochemical plant contains GenX, other PFAs

[Press-News.org] Supportive, stable caregiving in childhood protects heart health in adulthood