# Violence Exposure and Cardiovascular Risk in Adolescence

> **NIH NIH F32** · NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY · 2021 · $66,390

## Abstract

Project Summary/Abstract
 Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of adult mortality in the United States. Preclinical
signs of CVD begin to emerge within the first decades of life and, as a result, CVD is increasingly being
understood as a lifecourse disease. From a public health perspective, there is therefore a large need to
understand the experiential and biobehavioral antecedents of CVD in early life. With this in mind, recent
reports have identified youth violence exposure as a risk factor for lifetime CVD risk. Between 25% and
42% of youth in the U.S. are exposed to violence, and emerging evidence is beginning to suggest the
hypothesis that violence exposure in early life instantiates biological processes that can have long-term
consequences for mortality and morbidity from CVD. Importantly, however, very little is known about the
specific biobehavioral mechanisms that underlie the association between violence exposure and CVD risk.
A mechanistic understanding of this kind is particularly important in adolescence, a period in which the
atherosclerotic process begins. Adolescence is also a time during which other factors that are relevant to
health such as self-control and health behaviors—putative mechanisms that may link violence to CVD
risk—are still developing. Given the limited amount of prior research, the question of whether self-control
and health behaviors are mechanisms that explain the association between violence and CVD risk is not
known. There has also been little research comparing the effects of indirect or “vicarious” exposure to
community violence with the effects of direct violence exposure (victimization/witnessing) on CVD risk.
 To address these gaps in the literature, the proposed research studies aim to 1) test whether direct
violence exposure and indirect violence exposure (community-level violence and crime) in adolescence are
uniquely and prospectively associated with pro-inflammatory activity and cardiometabolic risk across
adolescence; 2) to test whether self-control and poor health behaviors statistically mediate the associations
between direct and indirect violence exposure and inflammatory and cardiometabolic processes across
adolescence; and 3) to test prospective associations between direct and indirect violence exposure, self-
control, health behavior in adolescence and inflammatory and cardiometabolic endpoints in young
adulthood. This proposed program of research utilizes two data sources to test these aims.
 The proposed research is part of a broader post-doctoral training program, whose goal is to prepare
the applicant for a career as a PI at a major research university, focused on understanding early life stress
processes related to CVD pathogenesis. In addition to the research outlined above, the applicant will
complete coursework on the pathophysiology of CVD and statistical methods, gain technical experience in
the collection and measurement of inflammatory and cardiometabolic biomarkers r...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10113668
- **Project number:** 5F32HL146005-03
- **Recipient organization:** NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY
- **Principal Investigator:** Eric D Finegood
- **Activity code:** F32 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $66,390
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2019-03-01 → 2022-02-28

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10113668

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10113668, Violence Exposure and Cardiovascular Risk in Adolescence (5F32HL146005-03). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10113668. Licensed CC0.

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