The roles of epicardial adipose tissue in heart failure

Heart Failure Reviews(2020)

Cited 24|Views7
No score
Abstract
Heart failure is a growing health problem resulting in the decreased life expectancy of patients and severely increased the healthcare burden. Penetrating research on the pathogenesis and regulation mechanism of heart failure is important for treatment of heart failure. Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) has been demonstrated as not only a dynamic organ with biological functions but also an inert lipid store with regulating systemic metabolism. EAT mediates physiological and pathophysiological processes of heart failure by regulating adipogenesis, cardiac remodeling, insulin resistance, cardiac output, and renin angiotensin aldosterone system (RAAS). Moreover, EAT secretes a wide range of adipokines, adrenomedullin, adiponectin, and miRNAs through paracrine, endocrine, and vasocrine pathways, which involve in various extracellular and intracellular mechanism of cardiac-related cells in the progress of cardiovascular disease especially in heart failure. Nevertheless, mechanisms and roles of EAT on heart failure are barely summarized. Understanding the regulating mechanisms of EAT on heart failure may give rise to novel therapeutic targets and will open up innovative strategies to myocardial injury as well as in heart failure.
More
Translated text
Key words
Epicardial adipose tissue,Heart failure,Adipokines,Adrenomedullin,MicroRNAs
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined