Olli Raitakari
MD/PhD
olli.raitakari@utu.fi +358 29 450 2304 Kiinamyllynkatu 10 Turku |
cardiovascular and metabolic diseases; risk factors; vascular epidemiology; genetic epidemiology; epidemiology; dietary intervention; cohort studies; follow-up studies
EDUCATION AND DEGREES
2001 Docent in Clinical Physiology
1997-1999 Postdoc training, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, Australia
1997 Docent in Epidemiology
1996 Specialist in Clinical Physiology
1995 Doctorate, PhD
1989 Licentiate in Medicine, MD
CURRENT POSITIONS
2017- Professor in Cardiovascular Medicine, Director of the Research Centre of Applied and
Preventive Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Turku, Finland
PAST POSITIONS
2012-2016 Academy Professor, University of Turku
2007-2016 Professor in Cardiovascular Medicine (part time), University of Turku
2007-2008 Senior Scientist Grant, Academy of Finland
2004-2016 Chief Physician, Department of Clinical Physiology and Nuclear Medicine, Turku
University Hospital (leave of absence 2012-2016)
2002-2004 Consultant in Clinical Physiology and Nuclear Medicine, Turku University Hospital
2002 (1 mo) Head of Nuclear Medicine Department, Turku University Hospital
2000-2003 (3 mo) Head of Clinical Physiology Department, Turku University Hospital
2000-2005 Senior Fellow Post, Academy of Finland
1998-2000 Postdoctoral Research Post, Academy of Finland
1996-1997 Consultant in Clinical Physiology, Turku University Hospital
1991-1996 Positions as Resident in Clinical Chemistry, Nuclear Medicine, and Clinical
Physiology, Turku University Hospital
1988-1990 Positions as General Practioner and Resident in Internal Medicine or Surgery
Evidence suggest that many non-communicable disease outcomes have roots in childhood and may even stem of adverse ancestral exposures. Improved knowledge how various ancestral and early-life exposures lead to adult disease outcomes is essential in developing better preventive practices and policies that lead to improved public health. My mission has been to contribute to this knowledge-base by working in epidemiologic cohort studies with follow-up from childhood to adulthood. I am the Principal Investigator of the Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study (YFS), the largest study in Europe with a follow-up of cardiovascular risk factors from childhood to adulthood. I am also the Director of the STRIP Study, which is a leading long-term pediatric dietary intervention study testing the hypothesis that modifying the fat quality diet will have beneficial effects on cardiovascular risk early in life. During the past years, I have organized several field studies in these cohorts, and introduced novel technologies, such as imaging studies, genetic epidemiology methods and metabolomics approaches in these unique population resources. Our research has contributed to the understanding of pre-clinical development of atherosclerosis in children and young adults, including the effects of diet, life-style, metabolic risk factors, psychological traits and psychosocial factors, inflammation, hormones and genetic markers. For example, by applying non-invasive imaging methods in the Young Finns Study, we have demonstrated that exposure to adverse lipids, elevated blood pressure and obesity in childhood is related to atherosclerosis development in adulthood (JAMA 2003). Subsequent work stemmed from this initial observation has led to numerous original publications that have shown in detail how exposure to a large range of aetiogenic factors early in life contribute to the development of cardio-metabolic outcomes in adulthood. For example, by pooling international i3C Consortium data, we have demonstrated that overweight or obese children who became non-obese by adulthood had similar risks of many cardio-metabolic adult outcomes as individuals who were never obese (NEJM 2011). Thus, the results of our studies have clearly demonstrated that individual’s exposure to various stressors in early life is contributing to his/her adult phenotype and disease risk. The results have had significant impact on preventive practices. As a concrete demonstration of the international recognition and impact of my team’s work, many of our studies are widely cited in all updated paediatric guidelines on cardiovascular prevention both in Europe and in US.
- Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Childhood and Adulthood and Cardiovascular Disease in Middle Age (2024)
- JAMA Network Open
- Change in cognitive performance during seven-year follow-up in midlife is associated with sex, age, and education : The Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study (2024)
- Journal of Neurology
- Changes in 24‐h Movement Behaviors During Relationship and Parenthood Transitions: A Compositional Data Analysis (2024)
- Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports
- Childhood family environment and systemic haemodynamics in adulthood : the Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study (2024)
- Scandinavian Journal of Public Health
- Childhood Non-HDL Cholesterol and LDL Cholesterol and Adult Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Events (2024)
- Circulation
- Cognitive performance from childhood to old age and intergenerational correlations in the multigenerational Young Finns Study (2024)
- Journal of Neurology
- Correction to: Tracking of apolipoprotein B levels measured in childhood and adolescence: systematic review and meta-analysis (vol 183, pg 569, 2024) (2024)
- European Journal of Pediatrics
- Correlates of active commuting to school across two generations: the Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study (2024)
- Scandinavian Journal of Public Health
- Determinants of echocardiographic epicardial adipose tissue in a general middle-aged population - The Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study (2024)
- Scientific Reports
- Does the effect of adolescent health behaviours on adult cardiometabolic health differ by socioeconomic background? Protocol for a population-based cohort study (2024)
- BMJ Open
- Early intermittent hyperlipidaemia alters tissue macrophages to fuel atherosclerosis (2024)
- Nature
- Early resilience and epigenetic ageing : Results from the prospective Young Finns Study with a 31‐year follow‐up (2024)
- Aging Cell
- Effect of weight on depression using multiple genetic instruments (2024)
- PLoS ONE
- Efficient Search Algorithms for Identifying Synergistic Associations in High-Dimensional Datasets (2024)
- Entropy
- Exploring machine learning strategies for predicting cardiovascular disease risk factors from multi-omic data (2024)
- BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making
- Exposure to parental smoking and cardiac structure and function in adulthood: the Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study (2024)
- Scandinavian Journal of Public Health
- Gene expression networks regulated by human personality (2024)
- Molecular Psychiatry
- General and abdominal adiposity and hypertension in eight world regions: a pooled analysis of 837 population-based studies with 7·5 million participants (2024)
- Lancet
- Genome-wide analysis in over 1 million individuals of European ancestry yields improved polygenic risk scores for blood pressure traits (2024)
- Nature Genetics
- Genome-wide characterization of circulating metabolic biomarkers (2024)
- Nature