Literature DB >> 23989716

Adrenergic nervous system in heart failure: pathophysiology and therapy.

Anastasios Lymperopoulos1, Giuseppe Rengo, Walter J Koch.   

Abstract

Heart failure (HF), the leading cause of death in the western world, develops when a cardiac injury or insult impairs the ability of the heart to pump blood and maintain tissue perfusion. It is characterized by a complex interplay of several neurohormonal mechanisms that become activated in the syndrome to try and sustain cardiac output in the face of decompensating function. Perhaps the most prominent among these neurohormonal mechanisms is the adrenergic (or sympathetic) nervous system (ANS), whose activity and outflow are enormously elevated in HF. Acutely, and if the heart works properly, this activation of the ANS will promptly restore cardiac function. However, if the cardiac insult persists over time, chances are the ANS will not be able to maintain cardiac function, the heart will progress into a state of chronic decompensated HF, and the hyperactive ANS will continue to push the heart to work at a level much higher than the cardiac muscle can handle. From that point on, ANS hyperactivity becomes a major problem in HF, conferring significant toxicity to the failing heart and markedly increasing its morbidity and mortality. The present review discusses the role of the ANS in cardiac physiology and in HF pathophysiology, the mechanisms of regulation of ANS activity and how they go awry in chronic HF, methods of measuring ANS activity in HF, the molecular alterations in heart physiology that occur in HF, along with their pharmacological and therapeutic implications, and, finally, drugs and other therapeutic modalities used in HF treatment that target or affect the ANS and its effects on the failing heart.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adrenal glands; adrenergic nervous system; cardiac sympathetic nerve terminals; catecholamine; heart failure; hyperactivation; myocytes, cardiac; receptors, adrenergic; synaptic transmission; β-blockers

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23989716      PMCID: PMC3843360          DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.113.300308

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circ Res        ISSN: 0009-7330            Impact factor:   17.367


  161 in total

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