Influence of secondhand smoke exposure on the retinal vasculature of children in Hong Kong

Author:

Cheung Carol Y.,Zhang Xiu Juan,Chan Hei-Nga,Zhang YuzhouORCID,Yuen Vincent L.,Hsu Wynne,Lee Mong Li,Xu Dejiang,Wong Jason,Tang Fang Yao,Kam Kai Wai,Young Alvin,Ng Mandy P.,Ip Patrick,Chen Li Jia,Wong Tien Y.ORCID,Pang Chi Pui,Tham Clement C.ORCID,Yam Jason C.

Abstract

Abstract Background A recent prospective demonstrated that cardiovascular risk factors in early childhood were associated with later cardiovascular events. However, the impact of secondhand smoke (SHS) on children is unclear. The aims of this study is to determine the effects of SHS exposure on the retinal vasculature of children. Methods This is a population-based cross-sectional study of children aged 6 to 8 years. All participants received comprehensive ophthalmic examinations and retinal photography. Data on SHS exposure was derived from a validated questionnaire. A validated deep-learning system was used to automatically estimate retinal arteriolar and venular calibers from retinal photographs. Associations of quantitative retinal vessel caliber values with SHS exposure, number of smokers in the household, and total number of cigarettes smoked were determined by analyses of covariance (ANCOVA) after adjusting for potential confounders. Test of trend was determined by treating categorical risk factors as continuous ordinal variables. Results Here we show children exposed to SHS have wider retinal arteriolar (CRAE 152.1 µm vs. 151.3 µm, p < 0.001) and venular (CRVE 216.7 µm vs. 215.5 µm, p < 0.001) calibers compared to those in smoke-free homes, after adjustment for different factors. Wider arteriolar and venular calibers are also associated with increasing number of smokers in the family (p trend < 0.001) and more cigarettes smoked among family smokers (p trend<0.001). Conclusions Exposure to SHS at home is associated with changes in retinal vasculature among children. This reinforces the adverse effect of secondhand smoking around children though further research incorporating comprehensive assessment of potential confounders is necessary.

Funder

Chinese University of Hong Kong

Innovation and Technology Fund

UBS Optimus Foundation

Centaline Myopia Fund

Food and Health Bureau of the Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region | Health Care and Promotion Fund

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Medicine

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