主动脉瓣胚胎学、机械生物学和第二信使途径:对临床实践的意义

M. Notenboom, L. Van Hoof, A. Schuermans, J. Takkenberg, Filip R. Rega, Yannick J. H. J. Taverne
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摘要

文艺复兴时期,莱昂纳多-达-芬奇(Leonardo Da Vinci)是第一个成功地详细解剖主动脉根部及其邻近结构的人。从那时起,人们对主动脉瓣(AV)和主动脉根部的形态、功能以及它们之间的相互作用积累了新的认识,从而对主动脉瓣和主动脉根部复杂的功能特性有了更深入的了解。这使我们的视野从主动脉瓣是一个静态结构转变为主动脉根部是一个动态的相互连接的装置,是一个功能单元,通过体液和机械刺激与邻近结构产生复杂的相互作用。这种范式的转变刺激了瓣膜疾病的外科治疗策略,这些策略旨在重现健康的房室功能,因此房室疾病不再被视为需要替换的孤立形态病变。由于人工瓣膜仍然无法再现人性的复杂性,因此对病变房室的治疗,无论是狭窄还是功能不足,都有了巨大的发展,同样也转向了更加以血流动力学为中心的治疗方案,如罗斯手术和保瓣手术。原生的房室和根部组件可以在瓣膜上产生有效的文丘里效应,使瓣膜在心动周期中达到最佳开放状态,同时还能减轻左心室的压力。此外,原生房室瓣上还存在几种受体,通过与血液和其他剪切应力相关刺激的相互作用,形成信使通路。这些生理和血流动力学过程中有许多还未被充分认识,但可能是创新治疗策略的重要线索,或者是阻止或逆转瓣膜退化过程的治疗药物的潜在新靶点。目前还缺乏对这些途径及其对心胸外科医生和心脏病专家的影响的结构性概述。因此,我们通过将这些知识与当前的治疗方案和临床决策联系起来,概述了健康和患病房室的胚胎学、血流动力学和信使通路及其对临床实践的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Aortic Valve Embryology, Mechanobiology, and Second Messenger Pathways: Implications for Clinical Practice
During the Renaissance, Leonardo Da Vinci was the first person to successfully detail the anatomy of the aortic root and its adjacent structures. Ever since, novel insights into morphology, function, and their interplay have accumulated, resulting in advanced knowledge on the complex functional characteristics of the aortic valve (AV) and root. This has shifted our vision from the AV as being a static structure towards that of a dynamic interconnected apparatus within the aortic root as a functional unit, exhibiting a complex interplay with adjacent structures via both humoral and mechanical stimuli. This paradigm shift has stimulated surgical treatment strategies of valvular disease that seek to recapitulate healthy AV function, whereby AV disease can no longer be seen as an isolated morphological pathology which needs to be replaced. As prostheses still cannot reproduce the complexity of human nature, treatment of diseased AVs, whether stenotic or insufficient, has tremendously evolved, with a similar shift towards treatments options that are more hemodynamically centered, such as the Ross procedure and valve-conserving surgery. Native AV and root components allow for an efficient Venturi effect over the valve to allow for optimal opening during the cardiac cycle, while also alleviating the left ventricle. Next to that, several receptors are present on native AV leaflets, enabling messenger pathways based on their interaction with blood and other shear-stress-related stimuli. Many of these physiological and hemodynamical processes are under-acknowledged but may hold important clues for innovative treatment strategies, or as potential novel targets for therapeutic agents that halt or reverse the process of valve degeneration. A structured overview of these pathways and their implications for cardiothoracic surgeons and cardiologists is lacking. As such, we provide an overview on embryology, hemodynamics, and messenger pathways of the healthy and diseased AV and its implications for clinical practice, by relating this knowledge to current treatment alternatives and clinical decision making.
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