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Role of inflammation in diabetic cardiomyopathy

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-07-27, 11:20 authored by Pranav Ramesh, Jian L Yeo, Emer M Brady, Gerry P McCann
The prevalence of type 2 diabetes (T2D) has reached a pandemic scale. Systemic chronic inflammation dominates the diabetes pathophysiology and has been implicated as a causal factor for the development of vascular complications. Heart failure (HF) is regarded as the most common cardiovascular complication of T2D and the diabetic diagnosis is an independent risk factor for HF development. Key molecular mechanisms pivotal to the development of diabetic cardiomyopathy include the NF-κB pathway and renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system, in addition to advanced glycation end product accumulation and inflammatory interleukin overexpression. Chronic myocardial inflammation in T2D mediates structural and metabolic changes, including cardiomyocyte apoptosis, impaired calcium handling, myocardial hypertrophy and fibrosis, all of which contribute to the diabetic HF phenotype. Advanced cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) has emerged as a gold standard non-invasive tool to delineate myocardial structural and functional changes. This review explores the role of chronic inflammation in diabetic cardiomyopathy and the ability of CMR to identify inflammation-mediated myocardial sequelae, such as oedema and diffuse fibrosis.

History

Citation

Ramesh P, Yeo JL, Brady EM, McCann GP. Role of inflammation in diabetic cardiomyopathy. Therapeutic Advances in Endocrinology and Metabolism. January 2022. doi:10.1177/20420188221083530

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences; NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Therapeutic Advances in Endocrinology and Metabolism

Volume

13

Pagination

1-13

Publisher

SAGE Publications

issn

2042-0188

eissn

2042-0196

Acceptance date

2022-02-07

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-07-27

Notes

Going with CC licence info on the VoR PDF. Info is different on web page.

Language

en

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