Literature DB >> 25228951

Exercise training in hypertension: Role of microRNAs.

Vander José das Neves1, Tiago Fernandes1, Fernanda Roberta Roque1, Ursula Paula Renó Soci1, Stéphano Freitas Soares Melo1, Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira1.   

Abstract

Hypertension is a complex disease that constitutes an important public health problem and demands many studies in order to understand the molecular mechanisms involving his pathophysiology. Therefore, an increasing number of studies have been conducted and new therapies are continually being discovered. In this context, exercise training has emerged as an important non-pharmacological therapy to treat hypertensive patients, minimizing the side effects of pharmacological therapies and frequently contributing to allow pharmacotherapy to be suspended. Several mechanisms have been associated with the pathogenesis of hypertension, such as hyperactivity of the sympathetic nervous system and renin-angiotensin aldosterone system, impaired endothelial nitric oxide production, increased oxygen-reactive species, vascular thickening and stiffening, cardiac hypertrophy, impaired angiogenesis, and sometimes genetic predisposition. With the advent of microRNAs (miRNAs), new insights have been added to the perspectives for the treatment of this disease, and exercise training has been shown to be able to modulate the miRNAs associated with it. Elucidation of the relationship between exercise training and miRNAs in the pathogenesis of hypertension is fundamental in order to understand how exercise modulates the cardiovascular system at genetic level. This can be promising even for the development of new drugs. This article is a review of how exercise training acts on hypertension by means of specific miRNAs in the heart, vascular system, and skeletal muscle.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Angiogenesis; Exercise training; Heart; Hypertension; Macrocirculation; MicroRNA; Microcirculation; Muscles; Vascular system

Year:  2014        PMID: 25228951      PMCID: PMC4163701          DOI: 10.4330/wjc.v6.i8.713

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World J Cardiol


  127 in total

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Review 4.  Shear-Sensitive Genes in Aortic Valve Endothelium.

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