心衰中的心外膜脂肪--朋友、敌人还是旁观者?

IF 8 2区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Obesity Reviews Pub Date : 2024-08-26 DOI:10.1111/obr.13820
Aleksandra Paterek, Marta Załęska-Kocięcka, Zuzanna Wojdyńska, Małgorzata Kalisz, Anna Litwiniuk, Przemysław Leszek, Michał Mączewski
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引用次数: 0

摘要

心外膜脂肪组织(EAT)是覆盖心脏的脂肪库。心外膜脂肪组织与心肌之间没有物理屏障,因此心外膜脂肪组织很容易影响下层心肌。心肌脂肪组织可参与保留性心力衰竭(HFpEF)和射血分数降低性心力衰竭(HFrEF)的发生和发展。在健康人中,过多的 EAT 与心功能受损和预后恶化有关。在 HFpEF 中,这一趋势仍在继续:EAT 量通常会增加,过量的 EAT 与较差的功能/预后相关。然而,在高频低氧血症患者中,情况恰恰相反:进食量减少与心脏功能/预后恶化相关。令人惊讶的是,虽然 EAT 对心脏功能有益处,但它会加重室性心律失常。在此,我们对这些现象进行了剖析,试图解释这些自相矛盾的发现,从而为针对 EAT 而非心肌本身的新型心衰疗法找到靶点。然而,这种方法的成功取决于对 EAT 与心肌之间相互作用的透彻理解。
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Epicardial fat in heart failure—Friend, foe, or bystander

Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) is a fat depot covering the heart. No physical barrier separates EAT from the myocardium, so EAT can easily affect the underlying cardiac muscle. EAT can participate in the development and progression of heart failure with preserved (HFpEF) and reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). In healthy humans, excess EAT is associated with impaired cardiac function and worse outcomes. In HFpEF, this trend continues: EAT amount is usually increased, and excess EAT correlates with worse function/outcomes. However, in HFrEF, the opposite is true: reduced EAT amount correlates with worse cardiac function/outcomes. Surprisingly, although EAT has beneficial effects on cardiac function, it aggravates ventricular arrhythmias. Here, we dissect these phenomena, trying to explain these paradoxical findings to find a target for novel heart failure therapies aimed at EAT rather than the myocardium itself. However, the success of this approach depends on a thorough understanding of interactions between EAT and the myocardium.

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来源期刊
Obesity Reviews
Obesity Reviews 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
19.30
自引率
1.10%
发文量
130
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Obesity Reviews is a monthly journal publishing reviews on all disciplines related to obesity and its comorbidities. This includes basic and behavioral sciences, clinical treatment and outcomes, epidemiology, prevention and public health. The journal should, therefore, appeal to all professionals with an interest in obesity and its comorbidities. Review types may include systematic narrative reviews, quantitative meta-analyses and narrative reviews but all must offer new insights, critical or novel perspectives that will enhance the state of knowledge in the field. The editorial policy is to publish high quality peer-reviewed manuscripts that provide needed new insight into all aspects of obesity and its related comorbidities while minimizing the period between submission and publication.
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