3.8 Review

Structural remodeling in atrial fibrillation

Journal

NATURE CLINICAL PRACTICE CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE
Volume 5, Issue 12, Pages 782-796

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncpcardio1370

Keywords

arrhythmia; atrial fibrillation; fibrosis; structural remodeling

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Atrial fibrillation occurs and maintains itself in the context of a morphologically and functionally altered atrial substrate that can be induced by stressors such as underlying diseases (cardiac or noncardiac) or aging. The resultant structural remodeling is a slow process that progressively affects myocytes and the myocardial interstitium, and takes place from as early as the first days of atrial tachyarrhythmia. The left atrium, and particularly its posterior wall, is the location where remodeling is concentrated to the greatest extent. The mechanisms that underlie the remodeling process in atrial fibrillation have not yet been completely elucidated, although experimental and clinical investigations have indicated a number of signaling systems, inflammation, oxidative stress, atrial stretching and ischemia as factors involved in the cascade of events that leads to atrial fibrillation. The aim of this Review is to provide a comprehensive overview of the morphological changes that characterize the fibrillating atrial myocardium at histological and ultrastructural levels, and the established and hypothetical pathogenetic mechanisms involved in structural remodeling. This article also highlights the emerging therapies being developed to prevent progression of atrial fibrillation.

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