Aldosteronism in heart failure: a proinflammatory/fibrogenic cardiac phenotype. Search for biomarkers and potential drug targets

Heart failure is a major health problem of epidemic proportions. Irrespective of its etiologic origins, a dysfunction of this normally efficient muscular pump is associated with systemic consequences, a progressive downhill clinical course and poor prognosis. Ventricular dysfunction is ultimately ac...

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Published inCurrent drug targets Vol. 4; no. 6; p. 505
Main Authors Weber, Karl T, Gerling, Ivan C, Kiani, Mohammad F, Guntaka, Ramareddy V, Sun, Yao, Ahokas, Robert A, Postlethwaite, Arnold E, Warrington, Kenneth J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United Arab Emirates 01.08.2003
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Summary:Heart failure is a major health problem of epidemic proportions. Irrespective of its etiologic origins, a dysfunction of this normally efficient muscular pump is associated with systemic consequences, a progressive downhill clinical course and poor prognosis. Ventricular dysfunction is ultimately accompanied by neurohormonal system activation that accounts for: the congestive heart failure syndrome; an induction of oxi/nitrosative stress; adverse vascular remodeling; and activation of the immune system that contributes to a wasting syndrome known as cardiac cachexia. Circulating effector hormones of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system are an integral feature of this neurohormonal activation; they have systemic consequences. Insights into the pathophysiology of heart failure will identify improved methods of prevention, including biomarkers to aid in its detection and identification of risk, and to the development of specific drug targets. Herein we address one aspect of the neurohormonal profile of heart failure, namely that related to aldosteronism. Our focus is directed at the link between aldosteronism and its adverse influence on coronary vasculature structure, a proinflammatory/fibrogenic cardiac phenotype, which is based on an immunostimulatory state that includes activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
ISSN:1389-4501
DOI:10.2174/1389450033490948