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Published Online
on September 3, 2009

Hypertension. 2009
Published online before print September 3, 2009, doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.109.192639
A more recent version of this article appeared on November 1, 2009
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Noninvasive Assessment of Subclinical Atherosclerosis in Children and Adolescents. Recommendations for Standard Assessment for Clinical Research. A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association

Elaine M. Urbina MD, FAHA, Chair; Richard V. Williams MD; Bruce S. Alpert MD, FAHA; Ronnie T. Collins MD; Stephen R. Daniels MD, PhD, FAHA; Laura Hayman PhD, RN, FAHA; Marc Jacobson MD, FAHA; Larry Mahoney MD, FAHA; Michele Mietus-Snyder MD; Albert Rocchini MD, FAHA; Julia Steinberger MD, MS; Brian McCrindle MD, MPH, FAHA; on behalf of the American Heart Association Atherosclerosis, Hypertension, Obesity in Youth Committee of the Council on Cardiovascular Disease in the Young

Abstract—Deterioration in endothelial function and arterial stiffness are early events in the development of cardiovascular diseases. In adults, noninvasive measures of atherosclerosis have become established as valid and reliable tools for refining cardiovascular risk to target individuals who need early intervention. With limited pediatric data, the use of these techniques in children and adolescents largely has been reserved for research purposes. Therefore, this scientific statement was written to (1) review the current literature on the noninvasive assessment of atherosclerosis in children and adolescents, (2) make recommendations for the standardization of these tools for research, and (3) stimulate further research with a goal of developing valid and reliable techniques with normative data for noninvasive clinical evaluation of atherosclerosis in pediatric patients. Precise and reliable noninvasive tests for atherosclerosis in youth will improve our ability to estimate future risk for heart attack and stroke. Currently, large longitudinal studies of cardiovascular risk factors in youth, such as the Bogalusa and Muscatine studies, lack sufficient adult subjects experiencing hard outcomes, such as heart attack and stroke, to produce meaningful risk scores like those developed from Framingham data.


Key words: AHA Scientific Statements • pediatrics • elasticity imaging technique • brachial artery • risk factors • vasculature • carotid arteries