Research at the Research Centre of Applied and Preventive Cardiovascular Medicine

Research projects

The Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study (YFS) - Epidemiologic study on atherosclerotic precursors in Finnish children and young adults

The Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study is one of the largest follow-up studies into cardiovascular risk from childhood to adulthood. The main aim is to determine the contribution made by childhood lifestyle, biological, and psychological measures to the risk of cardiovascular diseases in adulthood.

Project Leader: Academy Professor Olli Raitakari

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The STRIP Project - A Prospective Randomized Trial of Atherosclerosis Prevention in Infancy and Childhood - An Epidemiological Study

The STRIP study is unique worldwide; no other study has started dietary intervention in infancy and continued it for 20 years, and simultaneously collected data with repeated measurements on a vast number of risk factors and subclinical markers for cardiovascular health.

The main purpose of the STRIP Study (Special Turku Coronary Risk Factor Intervention Project) is the prevention of atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease by a dietary intervention which began in infancy and has continued to early adulthood. The trial was launched in 1990 when 1062 7-month-old children and their families were enrolled. Half of the families have received individualized dietary and other life-style counseling at least twice a year whereas the rest of the families have served as a control group. The STRIP Study intervention continued until the participants reached the age of 20 years.

Project Leader: Academy Professor Olli Raitakari

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Recent publications of the Research Centre of Applied and Preventive Cardiovascular Medicine

X-chromosome and kidney function: evidence from a multi-trait genetic analysis of 908,697 individuals reveals sex-specific and sex-differential findings in genes regulated by androgen response elements (2024)

Nature Communications
Scholz M, Horn K, Pott J, Wuttke M, Kühnapfel A, Nasr MK, Kirsten H, Li Y, Hoppmann A, Gorski M, Ghasemi S, Li M, Tin A, Chai J, Cocca M, Wang J, Nutile T, Akiyama M, Åsvold BO, Bansal N, Biggs ML, Boutin T, Brenner H, Brumpton B, Burkhardt R, Cai J, Campbell A, Campbell H, Chalmers J, Chasman DI, Chee ML, Chee ML, Chen X, Cheng C, Cifkova R, Daviglus M, Delgado G, Dittrich K, Edwards TL, Endlich K, Michael Gaziano J, Giri A, Giulianini F, Gordon SD, Gudbjartsson DF, Hallan S, Hamet P, Hartman CA, Hayward C, Heid IM, Hellwege JN, Holleczek B, Holm H, Hutri-Kähönen N, Hveem K, Isermann B, Jonas JB, Joshi PK, Kamatani Y, Kanai M, Kastarinen M, Khor CC, Kiess W, Kleber ME, Körner A, Kovacs P, Krajcoviechova A, Kramer H, Krämer BK, Kuokkanen M, Kähönen M, Lange LA, Lash JP, Lehtimäki T, Li H, Lin BM, Liu J, Loeffler M, Lyytikäinen L, Magnusson PKE, Martin NG, Matsuda K, Milaneschi Y, Mishra PP, Mononen N, Montgomery GW, Mook-Kanamori DO, Mychaleckyj JC, März W, Nauck M, Nikus K, Nolte IM, Noordam R, Okada Y, Olafsson I, Oldehinkel AJ, Penninx BWJH, Perola M, Pirastu N, Polasek O, Porteous DJ, Poulain T, Psaty BM, Rabelink TJ, Raffield LM, Raitakari OT, Rasheed H, Reilly DF, Rice KM, Richmond A, Ridker PM, Rotter JI, Rudan I, Sabanayagam C, Salomaa V, Schneiderman N, Schöttker B, Sims M, Snieder H, Stark KJ, Stefansson K, Stocker H, Stumvoll M, Sulem P, Sveinbjornsson G, Svensson PO, Tai E, Taylor KD, Tayo BO, Teren A, Tham Y, Thiery J, Thio CHL, Thomas LF, Tremblay J, Tönjes A, Most PJ, Vitart V, Völker U, Wang YX, Wang C, Wei WB, Whitfield JB, Wild SH, Wilson JF, Winkler TW, Wong T, Woodward M, Sim X, Chu AY, Feitosa MF, Thorsteinsdottir U, Hung AM, Teumer A, Franceschini N, Parsa A, Köttgen A, Schlosser P, Pattaro C
(Refereed journal article or data article (A1))