Jennifer J Rayner, Ines Abdesselam, Jiliu Pan, Andrew J M Lewis, Oliver J Rider
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Obesity and heart failure: exploring the cardiometabolic axis.
Obesity is one of the biggest risks to public health in both developed and developing countries, and yet incidence continues to skyrocket. Being the main risk factor for a large number of life-limiting conditions, obesity has the potential to cause enormous damage unless addressed urgently. Heart failure (HF) is the most common cardiovascular disease associated with obesity. The incidence of HF overall continues to rise and mortality rates remain high, despite the rapid and significant advances in pharmacotherapy which have recently transformed the landscape of HF treatment. Both obesity and heart failure are multisystem disorders which are closely interlinked. Obesity poses the body a number of challenges, ranging from haemodynamic, to neuroendocrine, to inflammatory, to intracellular physiology. This narrative review describes the pathophysiological 'vicious cycle' caused by the combination of obesity and HF. Management of obesity in established heart failure has for years been a controversial topic, and yet an increasing body of evidence suggests that there are numerous benefits to managing obesity and insulin resistance in heart failure. Here we review the existing evidence base, as well as exciting new developments, suggesting that we may finally be on the brink of a revolution in managing obesity in heart failure.
期刊介绍:
Cardiovascular Research
Journal Overview:
International journal of the European Society of Cardiology
Focuses on basic and translational research in cardiology and cardiovascular biology
Aims to enhance insight into cardiovascular disease mechanisms and innovation prospects
Submission Criteria:
Welcomes papers covering molecular, sub-cellular, cellular, organ, and organism levels
Accepts clinical proof-of-concept and translational studies
Manuscripts expected to provide significant contribution to cardiovascular biology and diseases