Chronic Heart Failure and Inflammation: What Do We Really Know?

TitleChronic Heart Failure and Inflammation: What Do We Really Know?
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsDick SA, Epelman S
JournalCirc Res
Volume119
Issue1
Pagination159-76
Date Published2016 Jun 24
ISSN1524-4571
KeywordsAnimals, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Cardiovascular Agents, Clinical Trials as Topic, Cytokines, Heart Failure, Humans
Abstract

As a greater proportion of patients survive their initial cardiac insult, medical systems worldwide are being faced with an ever-growing need to understand the mechanisms behind the pathogenesis of chronic heart failure (HF). There is a wealth of information about the role of inflammatory cells and pathways during acute injury and the reparative processes that are subsequently activated. We discuss the different causes that lead to chronic HF development and how the sum of initial inflammatory and reparative responses only sets the trajectory for disease progression. Unfortunately, comparatively little is known about the contribution of the immune system once the trajectory has been set, and chronic HF has been established-which clinically represents the majority of patients. It is known that chronic HF is associated with circulating inflammatory cytokines that can predict clinical outcomes, yet the causative role inflammation plays in disease progression is not well defined, and the majority of clinical trials that target aspects of inflammation in patients with chronic HF have largely been negative. This review will present what is currently known about inflammation in chronic HF in both humans and animal models as a means to highlight the gap in our knowledge base that requires further examination.

DOI10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.116.308030
Alternate JournalCirc. Res.
PubMed ID27340274

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