Emerging evidence for accelerated ageing and cardiovascular disease in individuals with cerebral palsy

Authors

  • Patrick G. McPhee
  • Maureen J. MacDonald
  • Jem L. Cheng
  • Emily C. Dunford
  • Jan Willem Gorter

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-2564

Keywords:

cerebral palsy, cardiovascular disease, risk factor, endothelial function, arterial stiffness.

Abstract

Objective: To examine longitudinal changes in traditional and non-traditional risk factors for cardiovascular disease in individuals with cerebral palsy and to investigate relationships between age, Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) and risk of cardiovascular disease. Methods: Individuals with cerebral palsy (n = 28 of 53 eligible participants; GMFCS levels I–V; follow-up mean age 35.1 years (standard deviation (SD) 14.4) participated in a longitudinal cohort study with 4.0 years (SD 1.2) follow-up. Traditional risk factors included waist circumference and systolic blood pressure. Non-traditional risk factors included carotid artery intima media thickness and distensibility, carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity, and flow-mediated dilation. Results: Absolute (0.31 mm (SD 0.13) vs 0.22 mm (SD 0.08) , p = 0.045, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 0.040, 0.151) and relative flow-mediated dilation (9.9 % (SD 4.7) vs 7.5 % (SD 2.6), p = 0.049, 95% CI 0.464, 4.42) decreased, while carotid artery intima media thickness (0.52 mm (SD 0.17) vs 0.67 mm (SD 0.33), p = 0.041, 95% CI –0.242, –0.074) increased from baseline to follow-up. No other risk factor changed significantly. Age at baseline was a significant independent predictor of carotid artery intima media thickness change (R-squared = 0.261, p = 0.031). Conclusion: Individuals with cerebral palsy experience significant changes in non-traditional risk factors for cardiovascular disease over 4 years, in the face of no changes in traditional risk factors. Compared with findings in the literature from the general population, these risk factors progress at a faster rate and at a younger age in individuals with cerebral palsy.

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Published

2019-06-12

How to Cite

McPhee, P. G., MacDonald, M. J., Cheng, J. L., Dunford, E. C., & Gorter, J. W. (2019). Emerging evidence for accelerated ageing and cardiovascular disease in individuals with cerebral palsy. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 51(7), 525–531. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-2564

Issue

Section

Original Report