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CARDIOVASCRES-S-20-01978.pdf (3.98 MB)

Current progress in clinical, molecular, and genetic aspects of adult fibromuscular dysplasia

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Version 2 2021-06-17, 10:42
Version 1 2021-06-15, 10:05
journal contribution
posted on 2021-06-17, 10:42 authored by Alexandre Persu, Piotr Dobrowolski, Heather L Gornik, Jeffrey W Olin, David Adlam, Michel Azizi, Pierre Boutouyrie, Rosa Maria Bruno, Marion Boulanger, Jean-Baptiste Demoulin, Santhi K Ganesh, Tomasz Guzik, Magdalena Januszewicz, Jason C Kovacic, Mariusz Kruk, de Peter Leeuw, Bart Loeys, Marco Pappaccogli, Melanie Perik, Emmanuel Touzé, Patricia Van der Niepen, Daan JL Van Twist, Ewa Warchoł-Celińska, Aleksander Prejbisz, Andrzej Januszewicz
Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) is a non-atherosclerotic vascular disease that may involve medium-sized muscular arteries throughout the body. The majority of FMD patients are women. Although a variety of genetic, mechanical, and hormonal factors play a role in the pathogenesis of FMD, overall, its cause remains poorly understood. It is probable that the pathogenesis of FMD is linked to a combination of genetic and environmental factors. Extensive studies have correlated the arterial lesions of FMD to histopathological findings of arterial fibrosis, cellular hyperplasia, and distortion of the abnormal architecture of the arterial wall. More recently, the vascular phenotype of lesions associated with FMD has been expanded to include arterial aneurysms, dissections, and tortuosity. However, in the absence of a string-of-beads or focal stenosis, these lesions do not suffice to establish the diagnosis. While FMD most commonly involves renal and cerebrovascular arteries, involvement of most arteries throughout the body has been reported. Increasing evidence highlights that FMD is a systemic arterial disease and that subclinical alterations can be found in non-affected arterial segments. Recent significant progress in FMD-related research has led to improve our understanding of the disease’s clinical manifestations, natural history, epidemiology, and genetics. Ongoing work continues to focus on FMD genetics and proteomics, physiological effects of FMD on cardiovascular structure and function, and novel imaging modalities and blood-based biomarkers that can be used to identify subclinical FMD. It is also hoped that the next decade will bring the development of multi-centred and potentially international clinical trials to provide comparative effectiveness data to inform the optimal management of patients with FMD.

History

Citation

Cardiovascular Research, cvab086, https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvab086

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Cardiovascular Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

issn

0008-6363

eissn

1755-3245

Acceptance date

2021-03-17

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-03-19

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

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